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Singapore to study smoking ban for young adults, following New Zealand’s lead

  • Singapore will study how effective the policy initiative proves to be in New Zealand and how it could apply that experience
  • Also under consideration are tighter restrictions on vaping rules to stop young people ordering e-cigarettes online

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Young adults are set to face a smoking ban in Singapore. Photo: AP

Singapore is open to imposing a smoking ban on young adults along the lines of similarly strict rules proposed in New Zealand last month, underscoring its commitment to bolstering tobacco control.

“It is an attractive proposal, in that it prevents young people from taking up smoking while not putting too many restriction on older smokers,” Singapore’s Ministry of Health said in a statement Tuesday. “Then, as the years go by, more cohorts are smoking free.”

In a first such nationwide ban, New Zealand announced in December that it plans to raise the legal smoking age by one year every year and will introduce new legislation to progressively lift the smoking age from 18, starting in 2027 as well as limit the number of shops selling tobacco.

Singapore considers tighter restrictions on vaping. Photo SCMP
Singapore considers tighter restrictions on vaping. Photo SCMP

The city state of 5.5 million population plans to study how effective this policy initiative proves to be and how that experience could apply to Singapore though the ministry pointed out that its young people were generally not taking up smoking.

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Singapore may also enhance its vaping ban, the ministry said, calling that as the bigger challenge with young people finding ways around the law by ordering e-cigarettes online. “If vaping becomes entrenched among the younger population, it undoes all the progress we have made on curbing smoking,” it said in the statement.

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Smoke-free generation: New Zealand to ban cigarette sales for people born after 2008

Smoke-free generation: New Zealand to ban cigarette sales for people born after 2008

Singapore’s strict policies have helped cut smoking prevalence from 11.8 per cent in 2017 to 10.1 per cent in 2020, the ministry said. Even among young adults, a smaller proportion was smoking after the minimum legal age was raised from 19 years in 2019 to 21 years in 2021.

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World Bank data for 2018, the most recent year for which this data is available, put the number of adult smokers in China at 24.7 per cent, at 25.1 per cent in the US and 14.8 per cent for New Zealand.

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