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“If we can just ‘stall’ new unfriendly legislations, the scoreboard is already in our favour”: transnational tobacco companies and ingredients disclosure in Thailand

Objectives: To review the strategies employed by overseas cigarette manufacturers operating in Thailand to obstruct the passage and subsequent enforcement of national public health legislation, specifically the ingredients disclosure provision of the 1992 Tobacco Products Control Act. Methods: Analy...

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Published in:Tobacco control 2004-12, Vol.13 (suppl 2), p.ii79-ii87
Main Authors: MacKenzie, R, Collin, J, Sriwongcharoen, K, Muggli, M E
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Language:English
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cited_by cdi_FETCH-LOGICAL-b510t-d10af4bb970334e40ed727e7630df6bbf50e15d61c7105ee9b5ca43d0b746b0e3
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container_end_page ii87
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container_title Tobacco control
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creator MacKenzie, R
Collin, J
Sriwongcharoen, K
Muggli, M E
description Objectives: To review the strategies employed by overseas cigarette manufacturers operating in Thailand to obstruct the passage and subsequent enforcement of national public health legislation, specifically the ingredients disclosure provision of the 1992 Tobacco Products Control Act. Methods: Analysis of previously confidential tobacco industry documents relevant to non-compliance with the ingredients disclosure legislation. Results: Requirement for disclosure of ingredients contained in cigarettes contained in the Tobacco Products Control Act was identified by transnational tobacco companies (TTCs) not only as a significant threat to their operations in Thailand, but as a dangerous global precedent. Industry documents reveal a determined campaign to block, stall, or amend the proposed regulation during the legislative process. Industry representatives petitioned the Ministry of Health to revise the requirement from by brand disclosure to a more palatable by company submission. Strategies were adapted in the wake of the passage of the Act. Most significantly, the industry in concert with embassies in Bangkok threatened the Thai government with appeals to international trade bodies on the grounds of violation of international agreements. Industry documents also reveal that as submission of ingredient lists appeared unavoidable, leading companies operating in Thailand endeavoured to confound the disclosure requirement by disguising ingredients and reformulating brand recipes. Conclusions: The evidence presented highlights the importance of ingredients regulation and demonstrates how health policy can be transformed during its implementation. A greater understanding of trade agreements emerges as a priority for global tobacco control.
doi_str_mv 10.1136/tc.2004.009233
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Methods: Analysis of previously confidential tobacco industry documents relevant to non-compliance with the ingredients disclosure legislation. Results: Requirement for disclosure of ingredients contained in cigarettes contained in the Tobacco Products Control Act was identified by transnational tobacco companies (TTCs) not only as a significant threat to their operations in Thailand, but as a dangerous global precedent. Industry documents reveal a determined campaign to block, stall, or amend the proposed regulation during the legislative process. Industry representatives petitioned the Ministry of Health to revise the requirement from by brand disclosure to a more palatable by company submission. Strategies were adapted in the wake of the passage of the Act. Most significantly, the industry in concert with embassies in Bangkok threatened the Thai government with appeals to international trade bodies on the grounds of violation of international agreements. 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subjects Additives
Additives and Materials Guidance Panel
AMGP
B&W
BAT
Brands
British American Tobacco
Brown & Williamson
Business structures
Cigarettes
Commerce
Confidentiality
Descriptive labeling
Developing countries
Disclosure
Documents
DTI
Embassies
European Union
FCTC
FDA
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control
GATT
General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade
Government
Health policy
Humans
Industrial regulation
Ingredients
intellectual property rights
International agreements
International Cooperation
International trade
IPR
LDCs
Legislation
Lobbying
MOH
Philip Morris
Political activism
Politics
Public health
Public Health - legislation & jurisprudence
Regulatory legislation
Research Paper
RJ Reynolds
RJR
Smoking - legislation & jurisprudence
Smoking Prevention
T&N
tar and nicotine
TBT
technical barriers to trade
Thailand
Thailand Ministry of Health
Tobacco
Tobacco industry
Tobacco Industry - legislation & jurisprudence
Tobacco Industry - methods
Tobacco Products
Tobacco Products Control Act
TPCA
Trade agreements
Trade legislation
Trade liberalization
trade related aspects of intellectual property rights
transnational tobacco companies
Transnationalism
TRIPS
TTCs
UK Department of Trade and Industry
US Food and Drug Administration
World Trade Organization
WTO
title “If we can just ‘stall’ new unfriendly legislations, the scoreboard is already in our favour”: transnational tobacco companies and ingredients disclosure in Thailand
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