From Tea Stalls to Tumours, Tobacco Affordability Fuelling Cancer Epidemic in India

PWOnlyIAS

June 02, 2025

From Tea Stalls to Tumours, Tobacco Affordability Fuelling Cancer Epidemic in India

According to a recent survey India ranks among the top countries globally for male cancer incidence and mortality, with tobacco-related cancers being a significant contributor.

Tobacco Use in India

  • Tobacco Consumption: According to GATS2 data, nearly 42% of men and 14% of women in India use tobacco. India is home to 70% of the world’s smokeless tobacco (SLT) users.
    • SLT is more popular than smoked tobacco, especially in rural and low-income communities.
  • Preferences: Within smoked tobacco the bidi is preferred over cigarettes due to affordability, particularly in villages. However, India has witnessed the largest global increase in cigarette market share.
  • Health Impact: Both SLT and smoked tobacco significantly increase the risk of multiple cancers, including lung, head, neck, stomach, and pancreatic cancers
  • India’s Global Cancer Rank: India ranks first globally in male cancer incidence and mortality rates. Among tobacco-related cancers in Indian males lip and oral cancers are most prevalent followed by lung cancer
  • Ineffective Enforcement: Despite an official ban on gutkha, it remains widely available and used. The continued visibility and use of gutkha underscore the weak enforcement of existing laws.

Economic cost of Tobacco

  • Economic Burden: In 2017–2018, tobacco use imposed an economic cost of ₹1.77 lakh crore, accounting for 1.04% of India’s GDP
    • Smoking contributed to 74% of this cost Smokeless Tobacco (SLT) accounted for the remaining 26% With rising tobacco use, both health and economic costs are projected to increase further
  • Prevention Dilemma: India faces a dual challenge. A high burden of tobacco-related cancers, especially lung and oral cancers.
    • The complexity of lung cancer screening in a TB-endemic country. This calls for evidence-based anti-tobacco policies focused on primary prevention.
  • Policy Resistance: Policy resistance in tobacco control arises due to the tobacco industry’s influence, which impedes reform through policy interference, pricing tactics to maintain affordability, targeted marketing, dense shop networks, and a persistent lack of political will.
  • Taxation Gaps: Though there’s a proposal to raise GST on tobacco to 35%, it still falls short of the WHO recommendation of 75% of MRP.
    • Rising disposable incomes among India’s 450 million-strong middle class have outpaced tax hikes
    • 2024 Union Budget kept tobacco prices unchanged, enabling undershifting (where manufacturers absorb tax increases to expand market reach)
  • Pricing Disparities: Tobacco pricing in India reveals stark disparities bidis have a median price of ₹12, with some available for as low as ₹5; smokeless tobacco products are even more accessible, with a median price of ₹5 and lowest prices at just ₹1
    • In contrast, cigarettes have a median price of ₹95, yet cheapest options are still available for ₹5, undermining price-based deterrence strategies.
  • Accessibility: Single stick sales keep cigarettes affordable and help bypass graphic warnings
    • Banned in 88 countries, this practice remains legal in India
    • 87% of cigarette vendors in India sell single sticks
    • Often sold near tea stalls, reinforcing the “chai-sutta” culture
  • Impact on Low income earners: In India, where many earn just ₹170–180 per day (≈ $2), tobacco remains affordable due to low unit prices, its highly addictive nature, and easy availability in small packs or single sticks, making it accessible even to the poorest.

Way Forward

  • Early Detection: Tobacco affordability undermines the WHO’s MPOWER framework, which aims to reduce tobacco use through comprehensive control measures. 
    • Weak enforcement and low prices hinder progress in cutting tobacco-related cancers. 
    • Reducing tobacco use is vital for lowering cancer incidence .
    • To succeed, health systems must also be strengthened to enable early detection and treatment
  • Taxation: Regular tax hikes that outpace income growth are essential. This makes tobacco increasingly unaffordable, discouraging new and continued use
  • Ban on Single-Stick Sales: Eliminating single-stick sales can reinforce health warnings on packs and reduce impulse purchases, especially among youth
  • Public Health Investment: Allocate tobacco tax revenue to cancer screenings in underserved areas, public health programmes for awareness and treatment
  • Retail Regulation: Implement plain packaging with prominent health warnings to reduce tobacco’s visual appeal and restrict sales near tea stalls to dismantle the “chai-sutta” culture
  • Enforcement and Monitoring: Ensure robust enforcement through regular inspections and strict penalties for violations

Conclusion

To effectively combat tobacco-related harm, it is essential to invest in robust cancer screening infrastructure, expand tobacco cessation programmes, and support ongoing research to strengthen and refine evidence-based policies.

Main Practice

Q. Public health policies in India have failed to adequately address smokeless tobacco use, despite its wide prevalence and cancer risk. Examine the challenges and propose actionable solutions to tackle smokeless tobacco consumption. (10 Marks, 150 Words)

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Quick Revise Now !
UDAAN PRELIMS WALLAH
Comprehensive coverage with a concise format
Integration of PYQ within the booklet
Designed as per recent trends of Prelims questions
हिंदी में भी उपलब्ध

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