Why is the US Chamber of Commerce lobbying abroad for smoking?
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The United States Chamber of Commerce, the world鈥檚 largest trade group, is lobbying in foreign countries against smoking and tobacco regulations, 听罢耻别蝉诲补测.
The revelation comes less than a year after the federal government to American tobacco farmers, and at a critical moment in US foreign trade policy.
It is not unusual for countries to effectively work both for and against the tobacco industry. Since the Great Depression, the US provided subsidies to tobacco growers through a quota system. The policy limited how much a farmer could grow, controlling supply and demand, and therefore allowing the tobacco growers to profit.
That quota system ended in 2004. To help farmers transition into the free market, the Federal government funded a $9.6 billion dollar buyout program 鈥 called the Transitional Tobacco Payment Program 鈥 over a decade, .
The end of the buyout program in October 2014 coincided with the US Surgeon General鈥檚 report titled 鈥樷 which recapped five decades of anti-smoking regulation since a by the US Surgeon General first cautioned the American people of the dangers of smoking.
Earlier this month, China passed regulations to make indoor areas, and some places outside, smoke-free. In China, the State Tobacco Monopoly Administration (STMA), the agency that runs the Chinese cigarette industry, is also the government agency tasked with dissuading consumers from smoking. 聽
鈥淚t is a challenge,鈥 Li Baojiang, deputy head of the agency鈥檚 think tank, told 海角大神.
Blake Brown, an agricultural economist at North Carolina State University, that even though Americans are smoking less, markets abroad are promising, and there's still demand for the coveted North Carolina tobacco leaf.
The US Chamber of Commerce has until recently focused its efforts on the American tobacco industry.
But in the last few years, members of the Chamber of Commerce, , have written letters to leaders in Jamaica and Nepal, discouraging them from legislating for health warnings on packages. In Uruguay, a letter was sent urging retailers to keep cigarette displays in stores.
The president in Moldova was warned against 鈥渆xtreme measures,鈥 , which included common policies like restricting smoking in public places and limiting advertising for tobacco.
There are currently 180 nations taking part in the . The United States is not one of them. China鈥檚 recent smoking regulations were to come into compliance with WHO regulations, as are efforts by most countries moving forward with tighter tobacco policies.
The Chamber of Commerce has been vocal about not including exclusions in the US trade agreement currently making headway in Congress. A key part of the Trans-Pacific Partnership is allowing US companies to sue nations that do not comply with trade laws. The Chamber of Commerce advocating for the inclusion of the tobacco industry, warning that 鈥渟ingling out one product will open a Pandora鈥檚 Box鈥 of excluding other products 鈥渦nder the guise鈥 of public health regulations.
鈥淭hey represent the interests of the tobacco industry,鈥 , the head of the Secretariat that oversees the WHO treaty, called the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, to The New York Times. 鈥淭hey are putting their feet everywhere where there are stronger regulations coming up.鈥