Consequences of policy incoherence: how Zambia’s post-FCTC investment policy stimulated tobacco production
Metadata
Drope, J., Goma, F., Labonte, R., Lencucha, R., Zulu, R.
Document titleConsequences of policy incoherence: how Zambia’s post-FCTC investment policy stimulated tobacco production
Publication titleJournal of Public Health Policy
Year of publication2019
Tags
Location explored in the publication Region Income classification ThemeArticle 17: Alternative livelihoods to tobacco growing
Scientific article
CLOSED
Abstract
Zambia, a tobacco-growing country, provides manufacturing incentives to attract foreign and domestic investment. In an earlier study, we cautioned that these incentives could lead to local tobacco manufacturing, undermining its domestic tobacco control efforts. In 2018, as part of our continuing research program, we conducted key informant interviews (n = 15) and document analyses. Our early caution proved correct. In 2018, taking advantage of tax incentives, British American Tobacco Zambia and Roland Imperial Tobacco opened new cigarette-manufacturing facilities in the Lusaka Multi-Facility Economic Zone. They report capability of producing 25 million cigarettes daily, between 3 and 5 million of which is intended for the domestic market. Zambia’s tax incentives for cigarette manufacturing are likely to increase domestic consumption. The 170 new jobs created in the two plants pale when considering long-term health impacts and lost economic productivity of an increase in supply of locally produced cigarette brands.
