Cigarette demand and supply in Africa

Background Since the tobacco epidemic is moving from developed to developing countries, it is important to understand trends in cigarette demand and supply. We focus on the African market since it offers the tobacco industry one of the best expansion potentials. Methods A large variety of data fr...

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Main Authors: Nicole Vellios, Hana Ross, Anne-Marie Perucic
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Publishing 2018-03-01
Series:Tobacco Induced Diseases
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Cigarette-demand-and-supply-in-Africa,84008,0,2.html
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spelling doaj-6449295ad3664bc2978b8ad981ef29222020-11-24T23:48:33ZengEuropean PublishingTobacco Induced Diseases1617-96252018-03-0116110.18332/tid/8400884008Cigarette demand and supply in AfricaNicole Vellios0Hana Ross1Anne-Marie Perucic2University of Cape Town, Economics, South AfricaUniversity of Cape Town, Economics, South AfricaWorld Health Organization, SwitzerlandBackground Since the tobacco epidemic is moving from developed to developing countries, it is important to understand trends in cigarette demand and supply. We focus on the African market since it offers the tobacco industry one of the best expansion potentials. Methods A large variety of data from commercial (Canadean, Euromonitor International, tobacco industry reports), governmental (United Nations Comtrade, national statistics), and academic sources (Cigarette Citadels map and journal articles) were used to study cigarette demand in Africa from 1990 to 2012. We focus on cigarette production and international cigarette trade to detect structural changes in cigarette supply over the past few decades. We contrast data from these different sources. Results Cigarette demand and supply data in Africa is limited and is sometimes inconsistent across different sources. Given this caveat, we found that the overall demand for cigarettes (measured by sales) in the 22 countries covered by Canadean, which covers 80% of Africa's population, increased by 44% (from 165.6 billion cigarettes to 238.5 billion cigarettes) from 1990 to 2012. This higher demand has been met by an increase in cigarette production in these 22 countries by 106% during the same period. As result, Africa has transitioned from being a net importer to a net exporter of cigarettes. At the same time cigarette production has become more concentrated as the tobacco industry has strategically identified certain countries as production hubs. Conclusions Monitoring the production, consumption and trade of cigarettes by improving the quality of surveillance is important to understand the demand and supply of cigarettes not only in Africa, but also globally.http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Cigarette-demand-and-supply-in-Africa,84008,0,2.htmlWCTOH
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicole Vellios
Hana Ross
Anne-Marie Perucic
spellingShingle Nicole Vellios
Hana Ross
Anne-Marie Perucic
Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
Tobacco Induced Diseases
WCTOH
author_facet Nicole Vellios
Hana Ross
Anne-Marie Perucic
author_sort Nicole Vellios
title Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
title_short Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
title_full Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
title_fullStr Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
title_full_unstemmed Cigarette demand and supply in Africa
title_sort cigarette demand and supply in africa
publisher European Publishing
series Tobacco Induced Diseases
issn 1617-9625
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Background Since the tobacco epidemic is moving from developed to developing countries, it is important to understand trends in cigarette demand and supply. We focus on the African market since it offers the tobacco industry one of the best expansion potentials. Methods A large variety of data from commercial (Canadean, Euromonitor International, tobacco industry reports), governmental (United Nations Comtrade, national statistics), and academic sources (Cigarette Citadels map and journal articles) were used to study cigarette demand in Africa from 1990 to 2012. We focus on cigarette production and international cigarette trade to detect structural changes in cigarette supply over the past few decades. We contrast data from these different sources. Results Cigarette demand and supply data in Africa is limited and is sometimes inconsistent across different sources. Given this caveat, we found that the overall demand for cigarettes (measured by sales) in the 22 countries covered by Canadean, which covers 80% of Africa's population, increased by 44% (from 165.6 billion cigarettes to 238.5 billion cigarettes) from 1990 to 2012. This higher demand has been met by an increase in cigarette production in these 22 countries by 106% during the same period. As result, Africa has transitioned from being a net importer to a net exporter of cigarettes. At the same time cigarette production has become more concentrated as the tobacco industry has strategically identified certain countries as production hubs. Conclusions Monitoring the production, consumption and trade of cigarettes by improving the quality of surveillance is important to understand the demand and supply of cigarettes not only in Africa, but also globally.
topic WCTOH
url http://www.journalssystem.com/tid/Cigarette-demand-and-supply-in-Africa,84008,0,2.html
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