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Data InsightsStrong anti-tobacco measures are growing, but reach only a minority worldwide

Strong anti-tobacco measures are growing, but reach only a minority worldwide

This image presents a horizontal range chart titled "Anti-tobacco measures are expanding, but coverage remains patchy."

It shows the percentage of the world population covered by the World Health Organization's best practices for selected tobacco control policies, with data for 2007 and 2024.

Each policy has a corresponding horizontal bar indicating its coverage.

The chart includes a footnote indicating the reference year for taxation is 2008 and cites the data source as WHO, 2024. The chart is CC BY Our World in Data

Smokers are about 21 times more likely to die from lung cancer than people who never smoked, and they face increased risks from over a dozen other diseases. I know people who died from smoking: you probably do too.

In 2008, the World Health Organization created a set of tobacco control policies with different tiers, the highest of which are considered “best practices” — they are listed on the chart.

The chart also shows the share of the global population living in countries that had enacted these policies as of 2007 and 2024.

What surprised me is how recent most of these policies still are. In 2007, only a tiny share of the global population benefited from these policies. Since then, coverage has increased across all these measures, but most of them still reach less than half of the world's population.

What is the share of taxes on the retail price of a pack of cigarettes? See the data for each country

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