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Holy
smokes! Not again
Philippine
Star
11/03/03
As the recently
ratified Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003 or more popularly
known as the Anti-Smoking Law moves full steam ahead, there
is a cloud of concern and apprehension with regards to the fate
of the long-neglected tobacco farmers and workers.
The tobacco
industry has a long history of oppression. In the late 1600s, Filipino
farmers especially those in the Ilocos and Cagayan Valley
regions were subjected to abuse by the Spanish government,
being forced to fulfill tobacco production quotas on the pain of
corporeal punishment.
In recent years,
there were moves to revolutionize and upgrade the industry, and
purportedly, to give more benefits and incentives to tobacco farmers.
But apart from diplomas for excellence in tobacco production, not
much in terms of financial assistance to uplift standards of living
were received by the farmers.
As an example,
during the term of President Corazon Aquino, government mandated
that 15 percent of excise taxes from cigarettes and cigars
approximately P2 billion annually would go back to the tobacco
farmer.
Guess where
the money is going? To congressmen and local government units who
were stipulated by law to be recipients/caretakers of the money.
So, instead of giving tobacco growers the much needed increase in
farm gate prices, money was spent for building leaf drying and curing
plants which mushroomed all over the tobacco-growing provinces.
Apparently,
contractors who got juicy building contracts are more generous campaign
contributors than tobacco farmers.
As
Vague As A Cloud Of Smoke
Now that the
whole tobacco industry is being driven to extinction, any funds
that should go towards caring for the endangered future of industry
farmers and workers is going up in smoke.
Section 33 of
the Tobacco Regulation Act of 2003 stipulates that the state would
provide support for individual tobacco growers, cooperatives, and
displaced cigarette factory workers for a period not exceeding five
years. How this would specifically be implemented is not yet clear.
There are some
70,000 farmers from 27 tobacco-growing provinces, majority of them
are from northern Luzon, who will need to learn and develop alternative
farming systems, plant alternative crops and be trained for other
livelihood projects as tobacco lands are expected to shrink.
Similarly, some
11,000 workers in the manufacturing sector will also need retraining
as the manufacturing side of the industry gears for further decreased
sales resulting from the strict ban on advertisements and promotions
plus the total smoking ban on youths below 18 years old.
Extinction
And Bankruptcy
Aside from vague
mechanics to specifically assist displaced workers and farmers,
there is the more important issue of funding.
Apparently,
a number of local government units from tobacco-growing provinces
had already "monetized" the unreleased excise tax collections
during the past years by using these as collateral against borrowings
from banks. This means that future collection of tobacco farmers
share of the excise tax is already committed to pay loans and interest
charges.
Together with
the anticipated overall reduction in excise tax revenues, this seriously
puts at risk any possibility for new money allocated to the proposed
programs as stipulated in the tobacco regulatory law.
On the verge
of extinction, the tobacco farmers need to undergo rehabilitation
and retraining. However, it seems that there will be insufficient
or no funding at all to save.
Good
Law Must Benefit All
he new Anti-Smoking
law serves the country well, especially since smoking among the
young has been dramatically increasing over the last years.
The health department
estimates that the country spent P42 billion last year more
than twice the estimated loss in revenue from tobacco taxes
in medical expenses for tobacco-related diseases as well as losses
in productivity. Gaining more from a healthier populace definitely
compensates any loss in tax revenues.
As we move to
improve and protect public health specifically against diseases
related to cigarette smoking, let us not however forget those who
sweated in the fields to contribute a significant amount to the
local economy in the past and generated export revenues from the
sale of aromatic tobacco leaves then in demand by an addicted world.
In the implementation
of the law to stamp out smokers, the provision that extends assistance
to thousands of affected tobacco farmers and workers must be vigorously
pursued.
Just as the
state encouraged them to rely on this livelihood for centuries,
it is equally the moral obligation of the government now to ensure
that they find alternative livelihood and a source of living.
Breaking
Barriers With Mayor Lito Atienza
"Breaking
Barriers" on IBC (11 p.m. every Wednesday) is now a full-hour
show. The featured guest on Wednesday, 5th November 2003, is Mayor
Lito Atienza of the City of Manila. Whatever happened to the city
ordinance that declared Pandacan off limits to oil depot operations?
After a lot of strong words from the Mayors Office, the depots
are pretty much well entrenched in the area. What was the pay-off?
What about the much talked about "Bay Walk"? Is it another
gimmickry costing Manila taxpayers millions of pesos? Or is it a
real and honest-to-goodness development of the Manila Bay area that
will be sustained even after Mayor Lito Atienza leaves office?
Join us break
barriers and gain insights into the views of Mayor Atienza on various
issues affecting not only the City of Manila but the whole nation
as well.
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