Much before the Union Government’s ban, on 15th June, 2016, the Minister of Health and Welfare, U T Khader announced the banning of the e-cigarettes in the State of Karnataka, citing the addiction of a huge number of youngsters towards vaping, as per the study conducted by the state health department in collaboration with other experts, which showed that e-cigarettes attracts the younger generation to consume the conventional cigarettes. U T Khader, while announcing the vaping ban, also cited – “it is shocking to that even medical shops sell e-cigarettes” and so need to ban the vaping, also based on the notification on the recommendation of a committee on tobacco control. Laws permit use of two milligrams of nicotine, but for chewable chocolates only, to facilitate the de- addiction, which was clearly misused by the e-cigarette manufacturers, as the minister said. Thus the broader outcome of the vaping among teenagers can have far-reaching long-term implications of sparking larger consumption of tobacco among the Bangalore youth.
Following the Karnataka Government ban, the Union Government also banned e-cigarettes, in August 2018, citing to “protect the population, especially youth and children, from the risk of its addiction.
This fired up the ongoing consumer protests in Karnataka, which escalated to a national level. In the Public Interest Litigation (PIL), the Association of Vapers India (AVI), a nation-wide consumer rights group of e-cigarette users, filed a case against the ban on e-cigarettes in the Karnataka High Court in 2018, producing evidence to say e-cigarettes were helping tobacco smokers quit and they accused the Karnataka Government of being not able to control the sale of e-cigarettes in online modes, which is clearly evident in the illegal supply of e-cigarettes in the Bangalore market, even through the online retailers like flipkart and amazon.
In a press meeting they organized, Samrat Chowdhery, director of AVI briefed “Banning their use while allowing cigarettes to be sold violates basic principles of public health; protects the tobacco industry and criminalizes citizens who are trying to avoid tobacco-related death and disease.
These recent dynamics on vaping, from all fronts has a clear impact on the tobacco market of Karnataka and India, as a whole, adding much newer dimensions to the vape ban in 2016. Thus, a study is focused on the Government intervention in the Bangalore tobacco market and the welfare impact of the vaping ban, seems relevant and significant in the correction of market failure, in a local and even national level.
Therefore the research question
To what extent has the vape ban been effective in reducing the welfare costs of tobacco consumption in Bangalore?
Over and above the study of the welfare impact, a comparison of vaping with the consumption of tobacco in other forms, majorly smoking is done to assess the overall impact of the Karnataka Government’s ban on the welfare costs; that is the external costs and thus the social costs due to the over-consumption of e-Cigarettes, especially by the Bangalore youth, from the time of the Government ban on vaping till now. This helps to examine the overall positive impact on the welfare costs for Government and hence the correction of the market failure in the broad tobacco market of Bangalore.