{"id":58133,"date":"2017-03-09T11:44:48","date_gmt":"2017-03-09T16:44:48","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/depquebec.com\/?p=58133"},"modified":"2017-05-12T08:30:36","modified_gmt":"2017-05-12T13:30:36","slug":"ottawa-could-be-soon-raising-at-21-the-minimum-age-to-buy-tobacco","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/depquebec.com\/en\/ottawa-could-be-soon-raising-at-21-the-minimum-age-to-buy-tobacco\/","title":{"rendered":"Ottawa Could Be Soon Raising At 21 The Minimum Age To Buy Tobacco"},"content":{"rendered":"
Convenience stores employees accustomed to putting the bar at 18 for selling tobacco, alcohol and other products for adults may soon be forced to modify\u00a0their practices … on the rise.<\/p>\n
As a matter of fact, the Federal government is seriously thinking of\u00a0raising the minimum age for tobacco to 21 years of age, as proposed in a recently published discussion paper entitled Seizing the Opportunity : the future of tobacco control in Canada<\/a>, unveiled on February 22, 2017 by Health\u00a0Canada<\/strong><\/a>.<\/p>\n Canadians are invited to comment on this idea as part of a broad online consultation to redefine Canada’s tobacco control strategy for the next decade.<\/p>\n After recalling the devastation of tobacco use on health and the government’s determination to curb it, Ottawa is setting new ambitious (but far-off) goal of reducing tobacco consumption to only\u00a05% by 2035 (whereas it is deemed at 13% today). In addition, Ottawa points out that various provincial governments have already adopted such targets, including a level of only 10% for Quebec in 2025, meaning that if achieved within the next eight years, the current number of smokers would be reduced by\u00a0half (see table attached):<\/p>\n What would such a decrease means in terms of sales? It is totally legitimate for retailers to ask themselves this important question.<\/p>\n By 2015, based on the following table and various ratios, convenience stores sold an average of 66 cartons of tobacco per week. That number would drop to 33 in eight years, should Quebec achieve its objectives.<\/p>\n It is far from evident, however, that governments will succeed in attaining their objectives since the choice of smoking for adults is based on their free will.<\/p>\n On the other hand, tobacco retailers must be\u00a0aware of the government’s determination to reduce demand, especially among young people.<\/p>\n Without resorting to pure prohibition, they have shown a definite inclination towards what could be dubbed\u00a0“disguised prohibition”, whether it be excessive taxes<\/strong>, flavor bans<\/strong>\u00a0or\u00a0all-out regulation<\/strong>, the list of which would be too long to enumerate.<\/p>\n It should also be recalled that, with or without the help of governments, demand for tobacco has been declining steadily for 50 years, although for the past 10 years the volume of legal tobacco sold in Quebec has remained fairly stable, especially after governments decided to tackle more vigorously the wave of contraband tobacco that peaked in 2008.<\/p>\n
<\/a>
<\/a>