Lorillard
Statement of Fred Bond, Vice President Tobacco Growers' Inf Ormation Committee, Inc. Before the US House Ways & Means C Ommittee on the Administration's Health Security Act 931118
Fields
- Author
- Bond, F.
- Area
- SPEARS,ALEXANDER/EXEC CONF ROOM STO
- Alias
- 89735152/89735154
- Type
- TRAN, TRANSCRIPT
- Recipient (Organization)
- House
- Ways + Means Comm
- Named Person
- Bond, F.
- Clinton
- Document File
- 89734677/89735317/Tobacco Institute 930000
- Date Loaded
- 05 Jun 1998
- Named Organization
- Congress
- Tobacco Growers Information Comm
- Usda, U.S. Dept of Agriculture
- Ways + Means Comm
- Cnn
- Tobacco Growers Information Comm
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Author (Organization)
- Tobacco Growers Information Comm
- Site
- G65
- Request
- R1-004
- R1-132
- Master ID
- 89735005/5174
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Statement of
Fred Bond, Vice President
Tobacco Growers' Information Committee, Inc.
Before the US House Ways & Means Committee
On the Administration's Health Security Act
November 18, 1993
Thank you, Mr. Chairman, for the opportunity to appear before this Committee and
discuss "the effect of the tax increase proposed by the Administration on the production
of tobacco."
My name is Fred Bond. I am testifying on behalf of the Tobacco Growers' Information
Committee, an organization representing hundreds of thousands of tobacco farmers and
family members in 22 states across the country where tobacco is produced.
President Clinton proposes a drastic increase in tobacco taxes to pay for U.S. health care
reform. The majority of tobacco growers believe that all Americans should have equal
access to adequate health care.
Tobacco growers accept that as wage-earners, property owners and consumers, a portion
of what they earn, own or buy will be taxed. In fact, many tobacco growers are willing to
pay their fair share for a better health care system.
However, tobacco growers are not willing to shoulder a far greater tax burden or to
sacrifice their livelihood and their dignity to pay for a government program intended for
all Americans. They expect taxes to be fair - and not to single out certain Americans to
contribute more than their share.
Tobacco is one of the Southeast's leading industries. Various facets of the U.S. tobacco
sector, which includes tobacco'growing, manufacturing and sales, employ nearly 325,000
people from this region of the country. All of these folks have something in common --
they all stand to lose significantly from tax-increase proposals being debated here in
Washington.
Tobacco contributes significantly to the nation's economy - in both jobs and revenues.
In 1990, approximately 2.2 million workers derived income from the tobacco industry.
These workers earned over $66 billion. In that same year, the tobacco industry
contributed to the federal government over $21.9 billion in non-sales-related taxes: $11.4
billion in personal income taxes, $2.6 billion in corporate taxes, and $7.9 billion in FICA.
The industry also coutributed to the states $2.8 billion in personal income taxes and
$855.5 million in corporate taxes.
Consider the tobacco tax contribution from a different perspective. Tobacco often is
referred to as a "cash crop." In dollars and cents, each acre of tobacco alone yields more
than $30,000 in revenue for the federal government. That figure climbs to around
$70,000 per acre when state and local revenues are factored in.
How dire would the consequences of a tobacco excise tax increase be? It is estimated
that a 75-cent increase in the tobacco tax would wipe out more than 273,000 tobacco-
related jobs across the country. About 100,000 of these tobacco sector jobs would be
from Southern states alone.
The tobacco tax increase also would eliminate $8 billion in individuals' salaries upon
which the economy depends for strength and recovery. State governments would suffer
revenue shortfalls as tax collections fall with the projected decline in jobs and retail
sales. How will the states to make up the $1.55 billion difference?
This is unacceptable. We must devise a method to fund health care reform without
calling on specific geographic regions to make unfair sacrifices.

i
There are some interests who suggest implementing crop "diversification" programs to
help tobacco farmers make the shift to another crop. Some specifically suggest that a
portion of the federal tobacco tax should be earmarked to underwrite a transition. A
check from the government to the farmer is not going to salvage the local car dealership,
local churches and schools, restaurants, farm equipment stores and all the other elements
of communities.
Tobacco farmers are already well diversified. Most tobacco is grown on farms where the
bulk of the acreage is devoted to other crops such as soybeans and corn, or to other uses
such as raising cattle or bogs. Yet, without tobacco, a farm family cannot pay their bills.
Nearly 80 percent of all flue-cured tobacco farms derived half of their gross farm income
from tobacco. And about 65 percent of all burley tobacco farms obtained more than 50
percent of their gross farm income from tobacco.
Tobacco areas have achieved maximum diversification. Further diversification to crops
considered exotic for tobacco producing areas would not support existing farm families;
growers in other parts of the United States would not appreciate subsidies to help former
tobacco farmers compete with them.
I would like to address other matters pertaining to the impact of tobacco tax increases
on tobacco growers. The 1993 flue-cured tobacco quota was set at 891 million pounds in
December 1992. At that time, there was a strong market demand for approximately 815
mil. lbs. of flue-cured tobacco. Uncertainty created by cigarette excise tax increases by
as much as $2.00 per pack caused demand for flue-cured tobacco to drop by as much as
125 mil. lbs., or a 14 percent drop in manufacturer and dealer purchases.
The additional 125 mil. lbs. placed under loan in the flue-cured tobacco grower owner
marketing cooperative resulted in depressed returns to growers and a guarantee of the
future increased marketing assessments. Tobacco grower owned marketing cooperatives
are mandated by federal law at no net cost to the taxpayer. Losses in the sale of loan
stocks are made up by the grower and purchaser in the form of marketing assessments.
The threat of a cigarette excise tax increase has cost growers millions of dollars this year
in personal income and, because of large inventories, will cost the growers millions of
dollars in personal income in the future.
U.S. Department of Agriculture analysts have recently given an unofficial projection of
the 1995 National Flue-Cured Marketing Quota. Official projections can only be made
using existing laws that might impact tobacco. However, these projections took into
account a 75-cent-per-pack cigarette tax increase. These projections, with the 75-cent
increase, decrease the flue-cured quota to a catastrophic 50 percent from current levels
by 1995 - or a 445 mil. lb. decline.
In conclusion, Mr. Chairman, we believe that a solution to the nation's health care
challenge should be constructed on a solid foundation. All members of society who can,
should pay their fair share. Financing progressive government through regressive means
forces a few Americans to shoulder the tax burden of the entire society. Singling out
one product, in this case tobacco, to pay more is unfair and unwise policy.
The tobacco tax punishes, in an economic sense, the very people the Administration and
many in Congress claim they want most desperately to help - working Americans and
their families who play by the rules.
Tobacco tax increases are bad tax policy. Raising tobacco taxes will only create new
fiscal problems for hundreds of thousands of hard working Americans, and for state and
local governments across the country.
Tobacco growers from across the United States do support health care reform. But we
will = stand by and watch our livelihoods be destroyed by this drastic tax increase.

Just a few weeks ago, Mr. Chairman, you said during an interview on CNN that you
didn't think the purpose of the legislation was to "put people out of business [by] taxing
them so heavily."
While it may not be the intent of this legislation, it surely will be the outcome. Thank
you.
