The Government has introduced an Amendment Bill that will repeal three parts of the previous Government’s planned changes to regulate smoked tobacco.
“The Coalition Government is committed to the Smokefree 2025 goal, but we are taking a different regulatory approach to reducing smoking rates and the harm from smoking,” says Associate Health Minister Casey Costello.
“New Zealand has seen some of the largest drops in smoking rates across the world in recent years and we want to build on the practical tools and approaches that have worked to date.
“I will soon be taking a package of measures to cabinet to increase the tools available to help people quit smoking, while at the same time tightening regulations on vaping to prevent young people accessing vapes.
“As a first step, however, today’s Smokefree Environments and Regulated Products Amendment Bill will deliver on the Government’s 100-Day commitments and repeal three parts of the last government’s Smokefree legislation: the retail reduction scheme, denicotinisation, and the smokefree generation measures."
Costello says none of these measures are currently in place with Labour’s changes planned for later this year, 2025 and 2027.
“The last government was moving towards an untested regime that ignored how well quit smoking initiatives were working, and the potential downside of taking a prohibitionist approach for smokers, or for retailers and crime," says Costello.
The New Zealand Health Survey results released in December last year showed that 6.8 per cent of New Zealanders are smoking daily, down from 8.6 per cent the previous year, and 16.4 per cent in 2011/12 when the survey began. If those trends continue, New Zealand will hit the headline Smokefree goal of less than 5 per cent of the population smoking daily by 2025.
“In the last three years, 229,000 people have stopped smoking, with vaping playing a key role. Importantly, 79,000 of those who stopped smoking – more than a third of those who quit - were Māori. The quit rates for young people are even more impressive.
“The progress New Zealand has made in reducing smoking means that those who currently smoke are mostly long-term smokers who are addicted to nicotine and that’s who we need to focus on," says Costello.
"We want an approach that is practical and helps smokers to quit, rather than one based on ideology.”
Annual statistics on rates of people quitting smoking.
Smoking quit rates (all those 15 plus)
Year |
Quit rate (percentage of smokers who have quit in the past 12 month) |
Estimated number of people (total) |
Māori who have quit in past 12 months |
Pacific who have quit in past 12 months |
2011/12 |
11.4% |
74,000 |
15,000 |
4,000 |
2012/13 |
12.6% |
80,000 |
15,000 |
6,000 |
2013/14 |
10% |
63,000 |
13,000 |
7,000 |
2014/15 |
9.7% |
59,000 |
11,000 |
6,000 |
2015/16 |
9.6% |
58,000 |
9,000 |
4,000 |
2016/17 |
13.5% |
85,000 |
19,000 |
7,000 |
2017/18 |
12.5% |
75,000 |
17,000 |
6,000 |
2018/19 |
11.7% |
68,000 |
15,000 |
4,000 |
2019/20 |
13.6% |
76,000 |
17,000 |
5,000 |
2020/21 |
18.5% |
88,000 |
25,000 |
8,000 |
2021/22 |
19.3% |
86,000 |
33,000 |
17,000 |
2022/23 |
16.2% |
55,000 |
21,000 |
6,000 |
Youth (15-24) quit rate
Year |
Quit rate (percentage of smokers aged 15 – 24 who have quit in the past 12 months) |
Estimated number (total) |
2011/12 |
12.1% |
16,000 |
2012/13 |
13.6% |
16,000 |
2013/14 |
8.1% |
10,000 |
2014/15 |
10.0% |
12,000 |
2015/16 |
6.7% |
7,000 |
2016/17 |
17.9% |
18,000 |
2017/18 |
12.5% |
12,000 |
2018/19 |
14.6% |
13,000 |
2019/20 |
20.2% |
17,000 |
2020/21 |
30.8% |
17,000 |
2021/22 |
37.1% |
25,000 |
2022/23 |
41.5% |
14,000 |
1 comment
Hmmm
Posted on 28-02-2024 15:36 | By Let's get real
I don't know of a single person that was forced into smoking. It is and has always been a choice, just as it is a choice to give up.
It was once the norm, to listen to the budget to see how much your booze and fags were going up by. But that no longer seems to be the case... Is it because those products have been habituated into the lifestyle of the unemployed and low income households and that is the main battleground for political votes these days...? Increase the unemployment benefits and leave the booze and fags to be accessible by them.
Presumably "harmless" drugs will be up for debate with certain political parties soon.
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