Long maligned in many countries, could the steady rise in tobacco prices finally prove to be a deterrent?
As their purchasing power falls, consumers are doing everything they can to save money, which could ultimately lead to a decline in smoking. In England, the price of tobacco is slowly but surely driving more and more smokers to stub out their last cigarette. According to a new study, one adult in four now sees the cost of smoking as a key motive for kicking the habit once and for all.
Long maligned in many countries, particularly in Europe, could the steady rise in tobacco prices finally prove to be a deterrent? It would seem so, if only because of the fall in purchasing power suffered by consumers, as revealed by a new study conducted by UK researchers.
They examined the main reasons given by a sample of adults in England for quitting smoking over several periods, between March 2018 and May 2023, highlighting certain distinctions according to age, gender, socioeconomic status and parental status. This drew on responses to the monthly Smoking Toolkit survey, carried out among a sample of around 1,700 adults in England who are current or former smokers.
"Health concerns are generally the primary motive for people trying to stop smoking, with social and financial concerns, plus advice from a health professional, also commonly cited reasons," the researchers explain in a news release. "But since 2020, England has undergone a period of substantial societal instability, prompted primarily by the Covid-19 pandemic, which might have triggered changes in the reasons smokers give for wanting to ditch tobacco."
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