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BRITISH CONSIDER “LICENSE” TO SMOKE Print E-mail
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Los Angeles, February 18 – In a strong step toward repression of smokers, a plan is being floated to create a national “smoking licence” in Britain.

The concept was developed by Julian LeGrand, a professor at the London School of Economics and a one-time advisor to former Prime Minister Tony Blair, who wrote in a paper for Parliamentary Under Secretary of Health Lord Darzi the following proposal:
Suppose every individual who wanted to buy tobacco had to purchase a permit. And supposed further that they had to do it every year. To get a permit would involve filling out a form and supplying a photograph, as well as paying the fee.

Permits would only be issued to those over 18 and evidence of age would have to be provided. The money raised would go to the [National Health Service].
LeGrand’s comments also included some ideas about how the idea might function:
Breaking the New Year’s Resolution not to smoke would be costly in terms of both money and time. This would probably have a greater impact on poor smokers than rich ones, hence contributing to a reduction in health inequalities.

Politically, this might be viewed by some as giving people a ‘licence’ to smoke; and by full-blooded libertarians as a subtle and even more dangerous form of paternalism. On the other hand, the popularity even among smokers of the smoking ban in public places suggests that firm actions in this area can lead to political as well as health pay-offs.
In addition to simply filing for the permit, LeGrand also has the idea that in order to obtain a permit, applicants would need to obtain an endorsement from a physician that their health is sufficient to permit smoking!

LeGrand told BBC Radio 5 that wants to make consumption of a legal product – tobacco – as difficult as possible . . . in a simple way. “You've got to get a form, a complex form - the government's good at complex forms; you have got to get a photograph.

“It's a little bit of a problem to actually do it, so you have got to make a conscious decision every year to opt in to being a smoker. 70% of smokers actually want to stop smoking. So if you just make it that little bit more difficult for them to actually re-start or even to start in the first place, yes I think it will make a big difference.”

LeGrand originally suggested the idea last November and it went nowhere. His initial proposal was for a permit that would cost £200 (about $400 U.S.) per year, but has now scaled down his idea to £10 (about $20 U.S.), which would raise about $50 million per year.


 
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Alfred Dunhill opened his first shop in 1893, his first tobacco shop in London in 1907 and the New York store in 1923.