Smoking kills – in India too

The following article in The Hindu is written by Sonalde Desai a Senior Fellow at NCAER & Professor of Sociology at University of Maryland and Debasis Barik an Associate Fellow at NCAER. The article features important evidence gathered from the India Human Development Survey (IHDS) conducted periodically by NCAER in collaboration with the University of Maryland. IHDS is India’s only national longitudinal panel data set and provides considerable opportunities for researchers to generate high quality relevant evidence to inform sound policymaking.

Recently a parliamentary committee declined to extend the size of health warnings on cigarette packets due to lack of independent evidence on the health impacts of smoking on the Indian population. A longitudinal study conducted by the National Council of Applied Economics (NCAER) and University of Maryland shows that in India too smoking kills.

The India Human Development Survey (IHDS) was first conducted in 2004-05. In this survey 41554 households were surveyed in both urban and rural areas in all States and Union Territories with the exception of Andaman-Nicobar and Lakshadweep. At this time extensive information about the lifestyles of over two lakh individuals residing in these households was collected. In 2011-12 these same households were surveyed again. We were able to re-interview about 83 per cent of the original households. At the time of the re-interview information on current location of the individuals from the original household was obtained including whether they are still alive. Thus we have access to a prospective data set which contains both information on smoking tobacco products and whether the individual has died in the seven years between the two interviews. The results unambiguously show that even after we take into account individuals’ age gender education and household wealth those who are reported to be daily smokers are more likely to die.
In the initial interview 26 per cent men and 1.6 per cent women above the age of 15 smoked. These statistics are very similar to those observed in the Global Adult Tobacco Use Study by Professor Ram and his colleagues at International Institute of Population Sciences conducted on behalf of the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare in 2009-10. The GATS study also noted that 24.3 per cent of men and 2.9 per cent of women aged 15 and above smoked.
Categorising smokers
Since smoking is often underestimated for younger people when smokers tend to hide their habits from the older family members we focus on individuals who are 30 and above. In this age group nearly 36 per cent men in the IHDS sample smoke; 29 per cent smoke daily. Among women only 2.5 per cent smoke. Although men from all walks of life smoke smoking is disproportionately concentrated among Dalit Adivasi and Muslim men. Among this group about 45 per cent men smoke; 37 per cent smoke daily. Lack of education also plays a role. About 46 per cent of illiterate men smoke while only 16 per cent of the college graduates smoke. Moreover smoking is concentrated among the lowest income group. Nearly 46 per cent of the men in bottom fifth smoke compared to only 20 per cent in the upper fifth. Death rates are higher for daily smokers than for non-smokers or occasional smokers. About 11.3 per cent of men aged 30 and above and who smoke daily died in the seven years following our initial survey; only 10.2 per cent of the non-smokers and occasional smokers died. However as we noted above smokers come from lower socio-economic strata. Hence it is difficult to know if these characteristics rather than smoking may be the cause of higher death rates among smokers. So we compare like with like and control for education marital status age caste/religious background urban/rural residence state of residence and whether the individual was employed at the first interview. We also control for household wealth. This does not change the relationship observed above.
Even after taking into account all these differences we find that smokers have a higher death rate than non-smokers. Among men daily smokers are 1.14 times as likely to die between the two interviews as the non-smokers and occasional smokers. Lest this seem like a small difference the improvement in survival by giving up smoking would be more than by difference between illiterate and those with eight years of education or between men living in Uttar Pradesh and Karnataka. For women smoking is even more harmful but given the very small number of women who smoke this impact is not significant.
Delaying anti-smoking campaigns will take a heavy toll on the Indian population particularly poorer and less educated men. What is disturbing about the current debate is the message that it sends to current and potential smokers. Whether the pictorial warning covers 20 or 30 per cent of the package is less important than the implication that Indian population’s risk profile is somehow different from that of non Indians and that until a study has been conducted in India we should not believe that smoking increases health risks in India. Nonetheless the results we show above should lay to rest the argument that Indians are not somehow immune to health consequences of smoking that beset non-Indian populations.
Debate in other countries
This debate is reminiscent of similar battles fought in other countries. In the U.S. for decades cigarette companies tried to throw a smoke screen over research results that unambiguously showed that smoking caused cancer and increased mortality. In France even in the late 20th century the legislature argued that controlling public smoking was pitting non-smokers’ rights against smokers’ rights. Financial interests played an important role in the French debate too. Constance Nathanson notes that by 1990 French tobacco market had been captured by multinationals leading a smoking proponent to grumble that anti-smoking advertising would selectively weaken French tobacco industry and “there will no less smoking or drinking in sweet France but smoking and drinking will be less French and more American.” These delays in anti-smoking legislations have led to slower decline in smoking in France than in other high income countries; as World Atlas of Smoking shows today 34 per cent French men smoke compared to 23 per cent in neighbouring Switzerland.
Let us not give mixed messages to our young men and increasingly young women; smoking is not harmless smoking is not cool. Smoking kills even in India.
Published in: The Hindu May 4 2015

A Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium Model for India

Over the last decade, the Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) framework has become a workhorse for macroeconomic analysis in both academic and policy circles. Following this emerging trend, we aim to expand our research capacity in macroeconomics at NCAER by introducing a baseline DSGE model for the Indian economy. This working paper comes out as a part of this process. In this paper, we make two contributions. First, we explore the empirical regularities of the Indian business cycle and establish a few stylized facts. Second, we produce a baseline DSGE model that can serve as an analytical framework for understanding these stylized facts. The model has a small open economy feature with a clear demarcation between consumption and investment goods sectors. We simulate the model with plausible parameterization based on the DSGE literature. Our results show that the baseline model can replicate the stylized facts reasonably well.

Domestic Product at Current and Constant (2004-05) Prices in India: Issues in Estimation of Communication Sector

This paper examines the estimation procedure of domestic product for communication sector in India at constant prices. It is observed that the methods used for estimating domestic product at constant prices suffer from serious flaws with respect to communication sector. When corrected by using a simplified method, it is found that the growth in real terms in communication sectors during 2004-12 is much lower than the reported figures.

Mid-Year Review of the Indian Economy 2014-15

This economic outlook by NCAER, co published with India International Centre, New Delhi, analyses expected growth, inflation, balance of payments, fiscal balances, savings and investment trends, and covers the state of important sectors of the economy, including the financial and corporate sectors for that fiscal year. Long-term trends in the macro-economic performance of the Indian economy, the outlook and the policy responses required to meet these challenges are discussed.

The elusive quest for freedom

The following article in The Hindu by its the National Data Editor Rukmini S features important evidence gathered from the India Human Development Survey (IHDS) conducted periodically by NCAER in collaboration with the University of Maryland. IHDS is India’s only national longitudinal panel data set and provides considerable opportunities for researchers to generate high quality relevant evidence to inform sound policymaking.

Having opened up a fresh conversation about the situation of women since the December 16 2012 gang rape has India done enough to address the roots of the hostile atmosphere it has created for women? While the rates of sexual violence in India — both reported in official statistics and unreported on the basis of household surveys — are towards the lower end of the global spectrum data on women’s autonomy in India indicate that there is a hidden emergency.

Women’s freedom and autonomy is less well studied than crime rates but some studies offer an insight. Through its nationwide large-sample India Human Development Survey (IHDS) the National Council for Applied Economic Research (NCAER) sheds light on the lack of women’s financial independence. The 2011-12 round of the IHDS found that less than 20 per cent of women had their names on their house’s papers just half had their names on a bank account and just 10 per cent could take primary purchase decisions for the house.

A U.N. Women-Landesa study in Andhra Pradesh Bihar and Madhya Pradesh found that just one in 10 women whose parents owned agricultural land inherited any nearly 10 years after the Hindu Succession Act was amended to give sons and daughter equal inheritance rights. The majority of men interviewed for the study said that they were opposed to their sisters or daughters inheriting land.

The IHDS was able to capture the severe constraints put on women’s movement and autonomy. Sixty per cent of women respondents both Hindu and Muslim said they practised some form of purdah or ghunghat; this proportion rose to 96 per cent in Rajasthan and 91 per cent in Bihar and was the lowest at six per cent in Tamil Nadu. Eighty-one per cent of women said that they needed permission to go to a health centre and one-third said that they were not permitted to go to a health centre alone. These numbers had not improved since 2004-05 when the first round of the IHDS was conducted.

Less than 20 per cent of women knew their husbands before they got married and 40 per cent said that they had no say in their own marriage. Dowry or bride price was still rampant and families paid an average of Rs. 30000 in cash in addition to 40 per cent giving expensive gifts such as cars and two-wheelers.

India has among the world’s lowest levels of female labour force participation — the proportion of working-age women who are either working or looking for work. Of 131 countries India ranked 11th from the bottom in terms of women’s workforce participation in 2010 with Pakistan and Afghanistan among the countries doing worst say data analysed by Steven Kapsos an economist with the Employment Trends Unit of the International Labour Organisation. Between 2004-05 and 2009-10 labour force participation rates declined sharply and rose only slightly again in 2011-12; according to the latest numbers less then 25 per cent of rural women and 15 per cent of urban women were in the workforce.
Mr. Kapsos and his colleague Andrea Silberman say the decline in women’s employment in India is for the most part explained by “occupational segregation” — the concentration of women in certain sectors of the economy. They say women are under-represented in the booming sectors of the economy and over-represented in those that are not adding many jobs. In eight of the 10 sectors that added the most jobs over the past 15 years they found that women’s share of this employment growth was less than a third. In the other two — teaching and crafts — it was higher but still less than half.

If political decisions on women’s autonomy are to be taken they will be taken by a deeply male political establishment. The 16th Lok Sabha has the largest ever number of women MPs but at 62 they still form just 11 per cent of the Lok Sabha MPs. Eight of the 66 Ministers in the Narendra Modi-led government are women and women Ministers make up 23 per cent of the Cabinet.

Despite large increases in women’s share of the electorate and of voters over the past 50 years documented by economists Mudit Kapoor and Shamika Ravi of the Indian School of Business Hyderabad women’s political representation in the States remains low; less than 10 per cent of the MLAs across States are women Bhanupriya Rao an open data activist found.

Nagaland Mizoram and Puducherry have no women MLAs. Women Ministers in States are even fewer; just seven per cent of Ministers across the States are women and eight States have no woman Minister. Just three women Ministers across the country handle the Home Ministries (two of them are Chief Ministers) and just two have been given the Finance Ministry.

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