- Raising the state’s tobacco tax will send smokers to out-of-state sources for cigarettes
...Most of the new money generated from the tax on traditional cigarettes — 90 percent (to $3.50)— would flow to the state’s General Fund, rather than health initiatives.
...Most people keep smoking after a tax increase; they just acquire their smokes elsewhere.
Michigan makes it illegal to bring a single untaxed cigarette into the Great Lake State, but we expect substantial increases in such activity.
A 2005 paper in the Journal of Health Economics by economist Mark Stehr, titled “Cigarette Tax Avoidance and Evasion,” concludes that up to 85 percent of the after-tax change in consumption is a function of tax evasion and avoidance.
...Remarkably, smuggling isn’t the only major consequence of these higher taxes.
In Michigan we have seen violence against police, people and property, all tied to the illicit trade in smokes..."
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