Literature DB >> 21852413

Roadmap to a tobacco epidemic: transnational tobacco companies invade Indonesia.

Richard D Hurt1, Jon O Ebbert, Anhari Achadi, Ivana T Croghan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Indonesia is the world's fifth largest cigarette market in the world but for decades, transnational tobacco companies (TTCs) have had limited success infiltrating this market, due to their inability to compete in the kretek market. Kreteks are clove/tobacco cigarettes that most Indonesians smoke.
OBJECTIVE: To determine how Phillip Morris International (PMI) and British American Tobacco (BAT) have now successfully achieved a substantial market presence in Indonesia.
METHODS: We analyzed previously secret, tobacco industry documents, corporate reports on Indonesia operations, the Tobacco Trade press, Indonesia media, and "The Roadmap".
RESULTS: Internal, corporate documents from BAT and PMI demonstrate that they had known for decades that kreteks are highly carcinogenic. Despite that knowledge, BAT and PMI now own and heavily market these products, as well as new more westernised versions of kreteks. BAT and PMI used their successful basic strategy of keeping cigarettes affordable by maintaining the social responsibility of smoking and opposing smoke-free workplace laws but in the 21st century, they added the acquisition of and westernisation of domestic kretek manufacturers as an additional strategy. These acquisitions allowed them to assert influences on health policy in Indonesia and to grow their business under current government policy embodied in the 2007-2020 Roadmap of Tobacco Products Industry and Excise Policy which calls for increased cigarette production by 12% over the next 15 years.
CONCLUSION: PMI and Bat have successfully entered and are expanding their share in the Indonesia cigarette market. Despite the obvious and pervasive influence of the tobacco industry on policy decisions, the Indonesian government should ratify the FCTC and implement effective legislation to reduce tobacco consumption and exposure to tobacco smoke and revise the Roadmap to protect future generations of Indonesians.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21852413      PMCID: PMC3914664          DOI: 10.1136/tc.2010.036814

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Tob Control        ISSN: 0964-4563            Impact factor:   7.552


  18 in total

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4.  Clove cigarettes.

Authors:  T L Guidotti; L Laing
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5.  Tobacco industry youth smoking prevention programs: protecting the industry and hurting tobacco control.

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6.  The relevance and prospects of advancing tobacco control in Indonesia.

Authors:  Anhari Achadi; Widyastuti Soerojo; Sarah Barber
Journal:  Health Policy       Date:  2004-11-02       Impact factor: 2.980

Review 7.  Evaluation of the health hazard of clove cigarettes. Council on Scientific Affairs.

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8.  Corporate social responsibility and the tobacco industry: hope or hype?

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Review 9.  Competing with kreteks: transnational tobacco companies, globalisation, and Indonesia.

Authors:  S Lawrence; J Collin
Journal:  Tob Control       Date:  2004-12       Impact factor: 7.552

10.  Prying open the door to the tobacco industry's secrets about nicotine: the Minnesota Tobacco Trial.

Authors:  R D Hurt; C R Robertson
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  16 in total

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7.  Term limits and the tobacco industry.

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8.  Association of Religious Commitment and Tobacco Use Among Muslim Adolescents.

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9.  Tobacco control and the World Trade Organization: mapping member states' positions after the framework convention on tobacco control.

Authors:  Jappe Eckhardt; Chris Holden; Cynthia D Callard
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10.  SEATCA Tobacco Industry Interference Index: a tool for measuring implementation of WHO Framework Convention on Tobacco Control Article 5.3.

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