{"id":11,"date":"2018-05-16T18:33:50","date_gmt":"2018-05-16T17:33:50","guid":{"rendered":"\/?page_id=11"},"modified":"2018-05-19T11:34:52","modified_gmt":"2018-05-19T10:34:52","slug":"background","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/smokingoutthetruth.com\/the-paper\/on-ethics\/background\/","title":{"rendered":"Background"},"content":{"rendered":"
This year has seen the debate regarding investment in the tobacco sector highlighted in a way that it has not in some considerable years.<\/p>\n
In April the California Public Employees Retirement System, CalPERS, announced<\/a> that it was reviewing its policy of divestment from certain industries, and in particular the decision it took in 2000 to divest from the tobacco industry. It was reported that CalPERS estimated that its decision to divest had cost it, at that point, some $3bn in missed profits.<\/p>\n It was also reported that Norges, the Norwegian Government Pension Fund, which has excluded most tobacco related investments since the end of 2009, had missed $1.9bn of potential profit and reduced its returns by 0.68% per annum from 2010 to 2015. Although CalPERS was reviewing its policy, Norges was not.<\/p>\n Subsequently, in May AXA announced<\/a> that it would sell immediately its \u20ac200m own-account investments in tobacco company equities and stop all new investments in tobacco industry corporate bonds, running off its \u20ac1.6bn of existing holdings as they matured. It was not selling either equity holdings or bonds in funds managed as third party mandates. AXA argued that smoking posed the biggest threat to public health in the world today and that \u201ctobacco will kill one billion people worldwide during the 21st<\/sup> century\u201d, citing statements from the World Health Organisation (WHO).<\/p>\n Alongside these debates has been the continuing and active debate regarding the safety or otherwise of e-cigarettes, their role in harm reduction, the regulation of the sector and the role of the tobacco companies in production and promotion of the category. This debate has seen a schism in “Public Health” with those in favour<\/a> of the products being countered by others who claim “it isn’t yet known if they are safe<\/a>“. Media headlines (\u201cVaping as bad as fags<\/a>\u201d for example) have played a role in changing public perceptions of the relative risks of e-cigarettes compared with combustible cigarettes, with ASH suggesting<\/a> that the proportion of survey respondents thinking that e-cigarettes were equally or more harmful that tobacco cigarettes increasing from 12% in 2013 to 23% in 2015. In many cases the tactics and language used by the detractors of e-cigarettes are reminiscent of earlier chapters of tobacco\u2019s history and not in a way which is flattering to the current generation.<\/p>\n The regulatory environment with respect to tobacco has been developing over many decades and, as the majority of the population in most countries are not smokers, the impact of that regulation is rarely considered as it does not, prima facie<\/em>, impact upon most of us. Many of us may have welcomed “smoke-free workplaces” although at the time of the introduction of such legislation in the UK most of us were already working in smoke-free workplaces (according to the ONS<\/a> by 2005 only 8% of adults were working where there were no restrictions on smoking). We may well have welcomed the restriction on smoking in pubs from a personal perspective, although the introduction of such legislation has undoubtedly been bad for the pub trade in the UK (with similar evidence overseas<\/a>). The banning of point of sale display of tobacco products in the UK and the introduction of plain packaging this year will barely have made a ripple in most of our lives. Given that the majority of us are not tobacco users, and many may not personally approve of tobacco use, each of these further restrictions would have either gone unnoticed or have been welcomed as \u201ca good thing\u201d.<\/p>\n That the experience of tobacco control is being widely quoted as a template to be used in other areas \u201cof concern\u201d is probably less well recognised. The idea of a \u201cslippery slope\u201d in regulation of legal products has been vehemently denied<\/a> by some supporters of tobacco regulation, but not by all as the following entries from the 2015 WHO Tobacco Atlas show quite clearly.<\/p>\n