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Council for Tobacco Research

C-E-I-R Tobacco Study Filed. Wa Post [Study Statistics Cover Income, Sales, Employment, and Population Group Data]

Date: 02 Jul 1964
Length: 1 page
HT0033031
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snapshot_ctr HT0033031_3031

Abstract

MUL

Fields

Type
NEWS CLIPPING
Depository Date
31 Jan 1996
Named Person
Ceir
Tepper, L.
Lor
Burns, A.E.
George Washington Univ
Master ID
300160514-0588

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132
Author
Wa Post
Box
096
Site
Hoyt
UCSF Legacy ID
yot1aa00

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Page 1: yot1aa00
WASHINGTON POST Waehingtan, D.C. Jtt3y 2, 1964 Page 29 N T®0033031 C-E-I-R Tobacco Study Filed The tobacco industry pro•Ijobs are created in dit•ect and limes the national average in statement points out I h a vides 82.0 billion a year Inllndirect supplier Industrtes,lexcise and sales taxes. Iboih producbon and manu personal a n d business !n- exclusive of employment In l It f i F u r e s c o n s u m e rlfacturinR are highlS conrrn• come, jobs for 1.3 million'the industry Itself and in people and nearly $4 billlonlgovermnent Jobs generated in Federal and state taxes, an economic research firm re- ported yesterday. The study, by C-E•1-B, Inc.. of Washington. conducted under a cosnmission from the P. Lorlllard Co., a big tobacco manufacturer, was filed with the House Commer e Com• mittee which Is h o l d i n g , . hearings on bills al-ned atiindustry contribute8 f o u rl regulation of the htidustryel advertising and labeling. Lester Tepppr, chief economist for C-E-1-R. said the assignment was to carry out an "obJectlve. Independ- eatt examination to set forth the basic economic facts of the Induatry." The figuees are based on 191132 data, the latest year for whk6 complete In- formation is available. An accompanying s t a t e• menl by Arthur E. Bums, professor of economics at George Washington Univet+ sity and C-S•1-B consultant, pointa out that the Industry, with Ita more than $7.7 billion of yearly consumer a a I e a, "has an Impact on the economy far beyond Its own bGrinda.° The atudY Itself, in tracing out those relaUonshlpa, shows direct and Indirect requtre- meats from 100 other sectors of the economy. For example, It reports the industry generates SBS mll- lion In sales for the auto in- dustry. $59 millkm for pe- troleum products, $49 milllon for electric power, Z;173 mil- lion for chemicals and wrap• ping and filter materials. $280 millfon for paper and paperboard. $130 million for raU and trvck transportation and tB8 m0lion for products of bon and eteel mills and foundries. It estimates that 186,0001 spending on tobacco as more'trated In a half do?.en clatr% than half the amount spent:- North and South Carolina. f bil Vi t d k C o r new au omo es, a n eorcia ,,, ,,,- &A ,,ill,,, ,,,_ L,,, I .Kentuc y, rRmia. "' `°` °" '°" °"' 'more than the total in a and Tennessee The studv The a t u V Y esUtnatcs to• I n u m b e r of other m a j o r I estimates that 30.4 per cenl bacco Industtv jobs at 2.1 perispending categories. ~of all farm cash inrome in Burns in his supplementary • producls " eent of total em. The tables show 416.000 those states comes from tn• ployment, with 'Its workers farmers in 26 states providinR ibacco. and fsrmete spending $1.6 work for 883.000 persons tn, "Those states;• Ihe eron• b1111on on personal consutap•.prnducing a tobacco crop'omist says, '•wculd undouht• tlon ltems 'with a cash value of 31.3 bil• edly feel a major Impact In proportion to Its salesllion, or 36 per cent of alllfrom any significant shift In the report eays volume thelllfarm cash receipts the consumption of tobacco aOURNAL-AMERICAN Nex York, iVev York June 30, 1964 Cite Tobacco's Economic Role Ccttaumers apend over M4 bllliou for tobt:oco prod- ucts, providtng $2,8 biWon In peraonsl and bttalneas Jn- came. an extensive Industry study dlsolosed tqday, a in million mflll~Jo~an~d~n~ B41 billion In Federal and 8tate fsxea the report by CSfB Inc, sbawed. The soreey, smde at t.he re- auest of P. Lerllisrd Co„ wae tllea with t.be Aonte lnterstate aad FotdtSn Commerce Cons- matlee, Wbteh cmrrenty h ~ betuAoes on the Iht Most segments of the eoon- omp are connected with the tobacco Saduatt9, the report sald, with We Industry gen- erating'DS tnUllou In anto pro- duct sales, 869 mB43n for patroleum ploducba, and $173 million for phemleala, celio- phane ans t11tlr t!lpL4llals. 18f,00D JOBS The number o! Jobs tleeated !n direct or ffid1resC euppller tndustrlea was estimated at 181111,000, cxeludtng employment tvlebin the industry Itaelf. The C8I6 report ea1d the bod0°h7 "OvIda work for 1.3 mm~ peopl~ Iaanatr, nm• ptWa ssnd fhrmers spend 11.6 ~ ~ penonal eone®p. There ose 418.000 fat•ms tn 28 atates productne a tobacco ~nWlth a aash value of $1.3 There are aomee B08,BDD teholesale ana txtall oatteta tot tobacco garoduots, Noreh and Bonth Catolfna, and Tennessee accountforover 90 per cent ne farms, acreage, cash recelps and fann em- ploymenl. CEIR said.

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