Thursday, December 18, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Smoking Still Comes Cheaper Than Vaping E-Cigarettes

IANS, 28 Mar, 2016 10:38 AM
    Regarded as a tax advantaged product and also having lower risks than the heavily taxed tobacco cigarettes, e-cigarettes actually cost higher than conventional cigarettes in most countries, new research has found.
     
    The study exposed the fact that the gap exists despite the fact that e-cigarettes are not yet widely subjected to comparable excise taxes as combustible cigarettes.
     
    For the study, detailed in the journal Tobacco Control, the researchers from the University of Michigan in the US, compared the cost of combustible cigarettes to those for two major kinds of e-cigarettes -- disposable e-cigarettes (non-refillable) and rechargeable e-cigarettes, which can be refilled with nicotine liquid.
     
    The findings showed that on an average, the price of a pack of combustible tobacco cigarettes was just over half the price of a disposable e-cigarette in 44 of 45 countries sampled around the world.
     
    While the liquid nicotine used to refill e-cigarettes can cost a couple of dollars less than a pack of regular cigarettes, the minimum price to purchase a rechargeable e-cigarette to use this liquid nicotine is more than $20. 
     
     
    Also, the rechargeable e-cigarettes preferred by most daily e-cigarette users cost even more.
     
    In addition, there is considerable debate in the public health community and media about e-cigarettes and similar new products. 
     
    While some see e-cigarettes playing a potential role in helping smokers quit, others point to strong concerns about youth uptake, lack of information about potential harm, lack of product regulation, and industry marketing practices, among other issues, the authors noted.
     
    Some jurisdictions around the world, notably Britain, have achieved price equality between cigarettes and e-cigarettes, the study said.
     
    The researchers, though reinforced the importance of increasing the price of cigarettes through excise taxes.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    No More Nudes In Playboy

    Last month, Cory Jones, a top editor at Playboy, met its founder Hugh Hefner and presented the idea of removing explicit photos from the magazine.

    No More Nudes In Playboy

    Worship Of Durga: Is Message Lost In The Rituals?

    Worship Of Durga: Is Message Lost In The Rituals?
    Tradition holds that the devas (gods) unable to face him pleaded for help from the Hindu Trinity, from whose combined will emanated the goddess, and was armed for her fight by the gods. But what if this was just one version of what happened?

    Worship Of Durga: Is Message Lost In The Rituals?

    Popular Indian Chef Sanjeev Kapoor To Open Restaurant In Brampton

    Popular Indian Chef Sanjeev Kapoor To Open Restaurant In Brampton
    Located at Queen Street in Brampton, in Southern Ontario, the Khazana restaurant is set for a two-day grand launch from November 2. 

    Popular Indian Chef Sanjeev Kapoor To Open Restaurant In Brampton

    Men Hate Sexual Infidelity, Women Jealous Of Emotional Cheating

    Men Hate Sexual Infidelity, Women Jealous Of Emotional Cheating
    If your partner has sex with someone else, it is considered infidelity even if no emotions are involved.

    Men Hate Sexual Infidelity, Women Jealous Of Emotional Cheating

    Alcoholic Women In Rehab More Likely To Have Their Babies Seized At Birth: Study

    Alcoholic Women In Rehab More Likely To Have Their Babies Seized At Birth: Study
    The study by researchers at the University of Manitoba also suggests that being in the three-year program helped women regain their children in the long run.

    Alcoholic Women In Rehab More Likely To Have Their Babies Seized At Birth: Study

    Study Finds Depression Often Goes Unrecognized, Cutting Into Worker Productivity

    Study Finds Depression Often Goes Unrecognized, Cutting Into Worker Productivity
    The findings have been published in the Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

    Study Finds Depression Often Goes Unrecognized, Cutting Into Worker Productivity