Tobacco News
A surprise bid by the City-County Council president to pass a stronger smoking cigarettes ban covering bars and bowling alleys -- in the waning days of the Republican majority -- has caught two key groups off guard.Democrats had been making plans to push for an even stronger measure after they take control of the council Jan. 1. No matter who's in charge, their votes are vital for passage of an expanded smoking cigarettes ban in any form, since many Republicans are opposed.And anti-smoking cigarettes advocates called the move by Republicans -- with backing from Mayor Greg Ballard --...
Tobacco is all farmer Daniel Johnson knows; he's been growing it for 28 years.He uses a cigarettes online harvester to launch his leaves into a hallowed out school bus.He jokes that school buses are the cheapest form of transportation known to man.But even if Johnson's named Georgia Farmer of the Year a third time, it won't be enough to save his crop from one of the driest harvest seasons in decades. "You can't compete with what the good Lord's gonna send ya," Johnson said. "I don't think we've ever had this much heat and drought at the same time. In the same season."Johnson walked me...
Smoking’s toll on the health and pocketbooks of Hoosiers and Indiana businesses was the focus of the Boone County Healthy Coalition’s monthly session, at Witham Memorial Hospital.“A study of health care providers in Boone showed that discount cigarettes use was a major concern for health in this county,” said Richard Stroup, coordinator of both the BCHC and Tobacco Free Boone County.“Indiana has had an overall great success rate in bringing the rate of smoking cigarettes down,” Stroup said.More than 21 percent of Indiana adults smoke, according to Tobacco Free Indiana, but that...
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Forty-seven years have passed since the surgeon general first reported that smoking cigarettes causes lung cancer. Since that time, cigarettes use has greatly declined in Montana and across the nation. Much of this decline is attributed to tobacco-related policy implemented by federal and state governments.Evidence-based policies that decrease the number of youth who start using cheap cigarettes and increase the number of adults who quit using tobacco include: increasing the price of all tobacco products; eliminating exposure to secondhand smoke; and funding comprehensive tobacco-use...
In January 2008, the state of Illinois implemented the Smoke-Free Illinois Act, prohibiting smoking cigarettes in all public places and places of employment, including privately owned bars, restaurants and casinos.1 Many states and communities have enacted similar legislation in recent years, but the Illinois smoking cigarettes ban was the first to include a smoking cigarettes prohibition on the gambling floors of commercial casinos.2, 3 During debate leading up to the act's passage, the casino industry and many other industries argued for an exemption from the statewide smoking cigarettes ban. They were unsuccessful.
In the first year after the smoking cigarettes ban took effect, revenue at Illinois casinos fell sharply from the previous year.4 As shown in the figure, the decline in revenue stands in sharp contrast both to the growth of recent years and to the performance of casinos in nearby states.
According to the Illinois Casino Gaming Association (an industry organization), the smoking cigarettes ban was responsible for a 19 percent decline in revenue during its first year. Critics of this claim have suggested that the general economic downturn is more to blame than is the smoke-free law.5.
Raising the Stakes
Smoke-free laws have been controversial, facing opposition from the owners of bars and restaurants, as well as from the owners of casinos. The policy discussion on prohibiting smoking cigarettes in casinos has generated sharper debate than smoking cigarettes bans in bars and restaurants for several reasons. First, the marginal contribution of one or two casinos to local employment and tax revenue, most notably in the Midwest and South, is much greater than from a bar or restaurant; in many small communities, one or two casinos employ a large percentage of the population and provide a large percentage of tax revenue to local communities. Second, many state and local governments earmark casino revenue to specific programs like infrastructure and education. Third, a casino-smoking cigarettes ban is likely to have a greater negative revenue impact on the gambling industry than a smoking cigarettes ban would have on the restaurant industry because customers patronize casinos for longer time periods than they do restaurants. Finally, the view by some that casino gambling is a sinful activity increases attention to any public policy affecting casino gambling.
One key factor in the potential revenue loss from a ban on smoking cigarettes in casinos is the percentage of gamblers who smoke. Those in the casino industry argue that a smoking cigarettes ban unfairly hurts their industry because casino customers have a higher smoking cigarettes rate than the general population does. Some evidence also suggests that casino customers who smoke cigarettes spend more on gambling than nonsmoking cigarettes customers.6 Regardless of the specific underlying reasons, a general observation seems to be that smoking cigarettes and gambling constitute what economists call "complementary goods," meaning that they tend to be consumed together.
Smoking Ban or Recession?
Although the Illinois Casino Gaming Association has claimed that the smoking cigarettes ban was largely responsible for the declining revenue of casinos, others have suggested that the downturn in general economic conditions was the culprit. In its 2008 annual report, the Illinois Gaming Board acknowledges the potential role of these
two factors, leaving their relative importance as an open question:
There are two factors underlying the reductions in this year's gaming revenues. The first is the smoking cigarettes ban. ... According to the casino industry, implementation of this act has caused the AGR [revenues] per admission to fall. This is because habitual smokers take smoking cigarettes breaks, during which time they do not engage in gaming activity. The second factor is the downturn in the Illinois and national economies. As a discretionary form of spending, gaming expenditures are especially prone to reductions during hard economic times. The relative importance of the above two factors has not yet been quantified with certainty.
—2008 Annual Report, Illinois Gaming Board, p. 12
In a newly released working paper, we take on this question.7 Using monthly data for adjusted gross receipts and total admissions at each of Illinois' nine casinos, we estimate statistical models to explain the pattern of revenue over the period 1997 through 2008. The models include controls for trends, seasonal patterns, regulatory changes and the general pace of economic activity. After controlling for all these factors, we evaluate the remaining change in revenue that is attributable to the Smoke-Free Illinois Act, identifying the effects of the smoking cigarettes ban by the timing of its implementation.
Our estimate for the effect on total revenue for all nine casinos is representative of our general findings: We estimate that the smoking cigarettes ban is associated with a 20 to 22 percent revenue decline, amounting to a total loss in casino revenue of more than $400 million. This estimate implies that casino revenue in Illinois would have been approximately flat in the absence of the smoking cigarettes ban (+/- 1 percent), rather than experiencing the 21 percent decline shown in the chart.
The presence of riverboat gambling in three states adjacent to Illinois provides an opportunity for comparing this finding with the experience of similar casinos that were not subject to the Illinois smoking cigarettes ban. Using data for gambling revenue at casinos
in Indiana, Iowa and Missouri, we find no significant change associated with the adoption of the Illinois smoking cigarettes ban. The same calculation that leads to our finding of a 22 percent decline in Illinois revenue yields very small increases in Iowa (2.2) and Missouri (1.9) and literally zero percent change in Indiana. Statistically, these estimates are all consistent with no change in revenue. This observation confirms—at least at the statewide level—that the effect we identify for Illinois is unique. Casinos in each of these states suffered roughly the same downturn in economic activity, but only the Illinois casinos suffered the losses that our model associates with the implementation of the smoking cigarettes ban.
Analyzing total attendance, rather than revenue, yielded further insights into the impact of the smoking cigarettes ban. Again, after taking account of other factors, we found that the smoking cigarettes ban was associated with a statistically significant decline in admissions of 12.3 percent. Estimates for surrounding states showed small declines in each state,
but in none of the cases was the decline statistically significant. So, not only did customers tend to gamble less and, therefore, generate lower revenue for the Illinois casinos (as indicated in the Illinois Gaming Board's annual report), they also attended the casinos less often.
Our full research report also compares attendance and revenue of individual casinos in Illinois with their nearby competitors. Our findings for these regional markets around the state further refine our estimates, but do not change the nature of the results: Riverboat casinos in Illinois as a group experienced significant downturns in attendance and revenue after the implementation of the Smoke-Free Illinois Act.8 In fact, after summing our estimated revenue losses for the individual casinos, we find the same outcome, an aggregate decline of approximately 22 percent.9
The Bottom Line
One of the reasons that the smoking cigarettes ban has been more contentious for casinos than for other types of businesses is the contribution that gambling taxes make to state and local tax revenue. In Illinois, casinos are subject to a per-capita admissions tax, as well as a progressive tax on gambling revenue. Revenue from these taxes is divided between the state government and the governments of the communities in which the casinos are located.
Using our estimates of revenue losses and declining attendance at each of the casinos in Illinois, we find that the tax loss was more than $200 million in 2008. For the local communities, the total loss in tax revenue amounted to over $12 million.
The economic effects of the Smoke-Free Illinois Act—specifically with regard to
casino revenue and government tax receipts—represent only part of the act's overall impact. In a full analysis, these costs need to be considered alongside other costs and benefits, including the public health benefits of the legislation. But as policymakers in Illinois and elsewhere ponder the implications of the Illinois smoking cigarettes ban, the impact on revenue, attendance and taxes should not be ignored.
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