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China, you have been warned: WHO estimates 200 million smoking-related deaths this century!
The calculation includes both the direct costs of treating tobacco-related illness and the indirect costs such as lost work productivity.
New Delhi: The harmful effects of smoking, inhaling the lethal fumes have been emphasized time and again with many countries around the world setting up strict laws encouraging people to abstain from indulging in tobacco use.
Smoking has the potential to induce different forms of cancer in the long term, along with other diseases.
In a report released by the World Health Organisation (WHO) on Friday, it was revealed that smoking-related diseases will claim 200 million lives in China this century and plunge tens of millions into poverty.
Holding the position of the world's largest consumer and producer of tobacco, the Chinese government receives colossal sums from the industry.
But a report by the World Health Organisation (WHO) and United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) said today that the Asian giant will suffer an economic toll if it does not urgently reduce its smoking population.
The paper – called "The Bill China Cannot Afford" – estimated that the total annual economic cost of tobacco use in the country in 2014 was 350 billion yuan, up tenfold from 2000.
"If nothing is done to reduce [the death rate] and introduce more progressive policies, the consequences could be devastating not just for the health of people across the country, but also for China's economy as a whole," WHO China representative Bernhard Schwartlander said in a statement.
The calculation includes both the direct costs of treating tobacco-related illness and the indirect costs such as lost work productivity.
"The rapid increase in costs associated with tobacco use in China is unsustainable," Schwartlander added.
It is estimated that 28 percent of all adults and 50 percent of men in China are regular smokers.
Rural-to-urban migrants are more likely to be smokers, the report said, adding that they risk descending into poverty when smoking-related medical costs become too great - a reality at odds with the government goal of eradicating poverty nationwide by 2020.
The organisations recommended a smoke-free policy across the country akin to laws in Beijing and Shanghai, where smoking is banned in most public places.
However, enforcing anti-smoking measures can be difficult in China as the state-owned China National Tobacco Corp, which enjoys a near-monopoly, shares offices and senior officials with the national tobacco regulator.
The report also urged further raising tobacco taxes to make smoking less affordable. While retail tobacco prices increased following a taxation hike in 2015, the average price of a cigarette pack remains just ten yuan.
A 50 percent increase in the retail price of cigarettes would prevent 20 million premature deaths over 50 years, the report said.
(With PTI inputs)