Smoking adversely affects smokers as well as adversely affects people and their surroundings. Smoking can cause adverse effects on a variety of diseases and health including lung cancer, emphysema, heart disease and so on. Secondhand smoke can cause the same side effects. However, the risk of second-hand smoke is usually greater than the risk of smoking directly by smokers inhaling. Because of all the negative effects of smoking, tobacco sales are subject to heavy taxation.
Smoking does not have a positive impact on yourself and your body. Complex smoke from chemicals in one cigarette is the main cause of death. Smoking should be illegal. By inhaling highly toxic nicotine or toxin, everyone has direct and long-term effects. On the other hand, the tobacco company provides employment opportunities to people who depend on the world industry and influence the public and companies. - Did you smell? That smell is mixed in the air. Whenever you inhale this rotten, polluted, dirty smell deeply, it slowly kills you. You smell it, and trillions of chemicals are flowing into your lungs. As you are watching, you will see someone smoking on the next bench. Smoking is the most inevitable cause of death. Therefore, smoking in all public places is prohibited.
In the US, the use of tobacco has been declining for decades due to tobacco taxes, ban on tobacco, and promotional campaigns. However, smoking continues to be a major cause of preventable diseases and deaths in the United States, nearly 500,000 people die each year, and expenditure on health and productivity exceeds over $ 300 billion annually. David Hammond, a public health researcher at Waterloo University (not participating in NEJM's paper), says: Please make a historical coincidence. "
Governments at all levels impose tobacco or tobacco taxes on all tobacco products to fund health care management plans. Taxes are mainly used for cancer research, smoking prevention, and smoking cessation programs. The idea behind tobacco tax is that it will lead to a reduction in the demand for tobacco products, especially among young people. In 1791, US Treasury Secretary Alexander Hamilton introduced the first US consumption tax. Since the consumption tax is imposed on the sales and production of tobacco products, the price presented to buyers is higher than the price of other goods and services. This is because producers, manufacturers and wholesalers exaggerate the price transferred to the end consumer to pay the excise tax and collect the taxes paid for these products.