New Zealand scraps world-first smoking ‘generation ban’ to fund tax cuts
- New Zealand's new conservative government will scrap the smoking ban, which aimed to prevent young people from smoking, in order to fund tax cuts.
- The repeal of the anti-tobacco law has sparked criticism from public health experts, as smoking is the leading cause of preventable deaths in New Zealand.
- The new government plans to use revenue from cigarette sales to fund tax cuts for middle and high-income earners, which has been met with concern from anti-smoking groups.
115 Articles
115 Articles
La Nouvelle-Zélande abandonne sa loi antitabac pour financer des baisses d’impôts
À peine arrivé au pouvoir, le nouveau gouvernement de droite néo-zélandais abandonne plusieurs législations progressistes, dont la loi antitabac qui était devenue un modèle dans le monde. La législation qui devait entrer en vigueur l’été prochain allait interdire la vente de tabac à toute personne née après 2008.
New Zealand’s new government scraps world-leading smoking ban to fund tax cuts
A year after passing a world-leading smoking ban designed to save thousands of lives and prevent new generations of young adults from smoking, New Zealand has announced a u-turn to help pay for tax cuts, infuriating public health officials and anti-tobacco groups.
New Zealand to Axe Smoking Ban for Those Born After 2009
New Zealand will now reverse a “world first” generational smoking ban that would have prevented the sale of tobacco to anyone born after 2009. The new tri-party coalition government will repeal legislation introduced by the Ardern Labour government that banned smoking for the youngest generation of Kiwis. The Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products (Smoked Tobacco) Amendment Act (pdf), which came into force in January 2023, banned the sale…
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