Maryland cigarette sales down 17% since tobacco tax hike, report says
Sarah Gantz, Reporter-Baltimore Business Journal
The number of cigarette packs sold in Maryland has declined 17 percent since 2008, according to a new report released Wednesday by a health care advocacy group.
A total of 200 million packs of cigarettes were sold in Maryland in fiscal 2012, down from 243 million in 2008, according to data compiled by Maryland Citizens’ Health Initiative that analyzes data from the national Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids. The report is intended to highlight improvements in combatting smoking among teens and adults since Maryland raised a tax on cigarette packs in 2008 to $2.
The report comes as the Citizens’ Health Initiative and other health care organizations prepare to lobby for another $1 increase on the cigarette tax. If successful in the Maryland General Assembly, the tax would rise to $3 a pack.
The total number of cigarette packs sold in Maryland has been declining for more than a decade, according to the report. Back in 1995, 389 million packs of cigarettes were sold in the state.
Maryland’s General Assembly in 2012 increased the tax on mini cigars (which come in fruit flavors and have become popular among teenagers) to 70 percent of wholesale price, up from 15 percent. The assembly also increased the tax on smokeless tobacco to 30 percent of wholesale price, up from 15 percent.
In the assembly’s next session, which starts in January, health advocates will also be seeking another increase to the tax on smokeless tobacco and mini cigars.