Saturday 30 October 2010

Grocers fight on for Coalition parties to keep pre-election promises on display ban

The Grocer reports an ongoing campaign to put the tobacco retailers' perspective before the English Department of Health. Both parties opposed this legislation before the General Election on its passage through the Houses of Parliament.

Following Peter Kellner's Open Letter to Vince Cable in the New Statesman on 21 October, a reply has appeared in New Statesman's Letter of the Week spot, from Parminder Singh, National President of the National Federation of Retail Newsagents (I haven't been able to find it online). He dismisses Keller's dichotomy of health or Big Tobacco (or as Kellner put it 'now is the time to choose between Big Tobacco and the British people'):
Our fears are genuine. The display ban is not a health v business issue: independent evidence demonstrates that it does not work on health grounds and it affects small businesses disproportionately. It therefore fails both tests of making effective and evidence-based legislation.
Singh also refers to international evidence of effectiveness in other countries, including the closures of shops in this places; he mentions that Denmark and Sweden have decided against the ban because of lack of evidence that it will work; and he cites the cost of complying with the legislation: another area of controversy.
 
Grocers have had high hopes since the formation of the Coalition Government that overturning the ban might be possible. To their credit they have continued to campaign throughout the summer and they – and the rest of us – deserve a good outcome: that another government will decide that the evidence doesn't justify a ban. Unfortunately Scotland seems unlikely to follow.

2 comments:

Eddie Douthwaite said...

The letter and link below:-


28 October 2010
Correspondence

Letter of the Week: Small shops will pay the price

Peter Kellner (The Guest Column, 25 October) claims there are two sides to the tobacco display ban - health and Big Tobacco - but he is not a retailer and doesn't understand the pressures we face.

Our fears are genuine. The display ban is not a health v business issue: independent evidence demonstrates that it does not work on health grounds and it affects small businesses disproportionately. It therefore fails both tests of making effective and evidence-based legislation.

International evidence, including data released from Pennsylvania State University, suggests a display ban would be completely ineffective or even counterproductive, while countries that have previously implemented a display ban (including Canada, Ireland and Iceland) have reported widespread closures. A report from the Institute of Economic Affairs predicts a similar scenario in Britain.

More recently, Sweden and Denmark have rejected display bans for these very reasons, as well as for fear of encouraging illicit trade.

The legislation is forcing 33,000 small shops that sell tobacco across the UK to pay £33m collectively to implement a measure that will not work. Britain is a nation of shopkeepers and the government should support them at a difficult time.
Parminder Singh
National President, National Federation of Retail Newsagents
London EC1

http://www.newstatesman.com/letters

Belinda said...

Thanks Eddie: I had a look for it but failed to find the link and assumed that letters weren't put online.