The Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
estimates a 50-cent hike in the U.S. cigarette tax could result in a decrease
of more than three million smokers by 2085. The tax increase would either
encourage people to quit, or would keep people from starting to smoke, the
researchers say.
The CBO report, which
appears in the New England Journal of Medicine, estimates 200,000 of those three million
people would have died before that year if the tax hike were not in effect. The
CBO does independent analyses of budget issues for Congress.
The decrease in the
number of smokers would result in $730 million in savings in healthcare costs
between 2013 and 2021, the report notes. In the long term, federal spending
would increase, because of the additional people living into old age, who would
use Social Security and Medicare.
Overall, the CBO
estimated the cigarette tax increase would result in a small projected
reduction in the federal deficit in 2035. “Consequences for the federal budget
are only one factor that lawmakers may consider when developing policies to
promote health,” the report concluded.
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