New Zealand will puff past its virtually-smokefree target by 20 years or more, unless tobacco taxes are increased far more than planned, MPs are to be told.
Public health specialist Dr Murray Laugesen said the planned four annual tobacco excise increases each of 10 per cent would mean the smoke-free goal would not be achieved until the 2040s or early 2050s, rather than by the 2025 target.
Dr Laugesen, who is preparing a select-committee submission on the tax-rise bill, argues in the latest NZ Medical Journal for a tax jolt of 40 per cent next year, followed by annual rises of 20 per cent.
He says this would enable the country to achieve the 2025 "smokefree" target - a smoking rate of less than 5 per cent.
The price of a cheaper-brand packet of 20 cigarettes would more than double to $29 after four years under this system, from $13 a packet now. The percentage of smokers in the adult population would drop to 10.4 per cent, from about 16.5 per cent now.