STATISTICS
Smoking is the most wide spread addiction. Statistics show that in 90
years there have been 1,1 billion smokers in the world, among them
47% men and 12% women out of the whole population. Only in China
there are 300 million smokers, 90% men and 10% women. In the developed
countries 42% of all men and 24% of all women smoke, whereas in
developing countries approximately 48% of men and 7% of women,
because smoking has spread there only recently. Prevalence among
men depends on geographic and also social situation. Most male
smokers come from west pacific regions, where more than 60% of
men smoke. In China, for example, which is the biggest country of
this region, about 61% of men are smokers. The least spread is
smoking among men in Africa, where less than 30% of men are smokers
on average. In developed countries there are 37% of men-smokers,
but in ex-socialist countries even 60% of men smoke. Smoking among
women is less spread. In ex-socialist countries about 28% of
women are smokers, in developed countries about 23% and in
South America about 21% of all women. In other countries only
10% of women smoke. The age when a man smokes his first cigarette
is getting lower every year. In lots of countries children start
smoking already at 15. Smoking is also the most spread among young
people. For example, in Africa more than 50% male smokers are
under 35. In France and Spain more than 40% of youngsters
(between 18 and 24) smoke. Smoking among the young seriously
increases the danger of getting sick (chronicle bronchitis,
lung cancer...). Moreover, young people cannot give up smoking
very easily. Almost one half of people who smoke their whole
life die because of cancer or other smoking consequences.
One half of them die at middle age (35 - 69), the other at late
age (over 70).
On average, a smoker smokes 15 cigarettes a day. People in developed
countries smoke the most cigarettes per day, about 25. In countries
with developing economy a man smokes 14 cigarettes a day, but in
ex-socialist countries of Eastern Europe even 18. In Africa an
average number of cigarettes smoked per day is 10, in America
and Europe, however, 18.
Average number of cigarettes smoked in one day
[per smoker]
| Region | Cigarettes per day |
| WORLD | 15 |
| Africa | 10 |
| North America | 18 |
| Asia | 14 |
| Europa | 18 |
| Australia | 15 |
| South America | 16 |
Per year smokers smoke about 6 million
tons of tobacco in different ways (cigarettes, cigars, pipe
tobacco...). Consumption of tobacco increases every day, especially
in poor countries, whereas in more developed countries it decreases,
which is a result of people being more conscious of the harm caused
by tobacco. In Europe the consumption of tobacco has remained
almost the same in the last 20 years, in America it has decreased
but in other countries it has been growing up very fast,
especially in west pacific region. Consumption decrease in developed
countries is very similar to the increase of tobacco consumption in
developing countries. This is why an average consumption hasn't
changed (One smokes 1650 cigarettes yearly.). However, China has
its own specialities. From 1970 to 1990 the consumption there has
grown for about 260%.
0
In 70-ties the greatest consumption of tobacco was in Canada,
Switzerland, the USA, Australia, Great Britain and other developed
countries. In that time a smoker smoked over 3000 cigarettes in a
year. Later the consumption decreased. And in the 90-ties the
biggest consumption was in Poland, Greece, and Hungary where it
exceeded 3500 cigarettes on a person in years 1990-1992. In less
developed countries the consumption has increased also because of
duty-free shops in airports and boarding, where people can buy
cigarettes at quite low price. Higher consumption resulted in
higher production. For production of cigarettes man uses 60-80% of
all produced tobacco, which is about 7 million tons per year. The
rest is produced in pipe tobacco or chewing tobacco. Civil or great
multinational companies, which control producing, manufacturing and
sale of tobacco handle most of tobacco output. The greatest monopoly
is in the hands of the government in China, where 17 billion
cigarettes were sold in 1993, which means 31% of the whole sale in
the World.
Producing of tobacco (in 1000t)
| Država | In year 1970 | In year 1988 |
| China | 801 | 1728 |
| USA | 819 | 765 |
| India | 353 | 439 |
| Brasil | 246 | 386 |
| Russia | 256 | 381 |
China is also the biggest producer of tobacco in the
world. It produces even more tobacco than other 7 biggest countries
together. Although tobacco grows in more than 100 countries, the
first 25 producers cover already 90% of the world production.
Countries, which import lots of unmanufactured tobacco, are usually
also the biggest centres for its remaking. Most of them, like
the USA, Germany, Russia and Japan also have the highest consumption
of tobacco. Others, like Belgium and Singapore are the biggest
tobacco-exporting countries. The USA used to export tobacco a lot
for many years, but recently Brazil and Zimbabwe have become the
leading countries in export of unmanufactured tobacco. Five
countries (Brazil, Zimbabwe, the USA, Turkey and Italy) cover one
half of the world export of unmanufactured tobacco. Lately also
China and Malawi export even more. The leading country in
manufacturing of tobacco is China. India uses almost 6,3% of
unmanufactured tobacco in the World, but from this only 1,7% for
cigarettes. In 1994 there were 55 billion cigarettes produced in
the World, from this more than a half in China, the USA, Japan
and Germany. Most of the countries that export lots of unmanufactured
tobacco use it a lot, too. Such countries are Japan, France and
Russia. Some other countries, like Hong Kong, Singapore and
Holland, export almost as much tobacco as they import.
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