peaps said:
Yet you ignore the data I posted in the post before this one....
Point it to me again, you linked to two articles in particular.
One showed the cost to be 5 million, one to be 13.7 billion (with +9 billion being “lost productivity).
I have always stated that life the issue
Up to smokers if they want to “kill” themselves.
And you can’t pull the “they use up valuable resources” argument unless you show they take more than they pay.
Loss of productivity is a valid equation when talking about tax! A worker contributes tax but if they become ill this tax isn't collected, it's a loss and it's right to calculate it.
1. It is only fair to calculate this “loss” if you also calculate savings (if they die and no longer pay tax, neither do they draw a pension, nor old age care), funny how only the costs are being considered no?
2. Do you really want to go down this route, “people who die no longer pay tax and this costs the state”. Other than the obvious comparison to treating people like economic units, please explain then why this doesn’t apply to the thousands of other activities that may lead to “loss of tax”.
I did show that even without productivity factored in the cost is still higher than tax paid
No. You. Did. Not.
One of your links showed it to be 5 billion cost to the NHS. (Oxford University research
suggests).
One of your links showed 13.7 billion in costs, but almost 8-9 of this was in “lost productivity”. And a 2.7 billion cost to the NHS.
The NHS itself provides the 2.7 billion cost.
One of your links was to an academic slide (light on stats), scanning through it shows no costs that support your costs, and 1 table that shows prices of US fags vs costs (not UK fag prices).
If you would have read the link you would see that it's not been ignored, costs are calculated into the equation and we get between 4 and 10 billion for illegal tobacco..
Where did you pull the 10 billion figure from, your bum?
(
From your link)Their estimate for 2007 is £16.6 billion, suggesting spending on smuggled tobacco products was around £4 billion."
Firstly you can't count "4 billion not collected" as a cost, If I don't give you 4 pounds, you haven't lost anything, other than the opportunity.
And that's 4 billion consumer expenditure, even if that had been legal purchases less than 4 billion would be tax.
I don’t know why you find it so hard to just post the information, instead “go read the links”, well I did and can’t see what you allude to.