The Future Fund has bought shares in a tobacco company which
commissioned a report on the economic benefits of people dying
prematurely from smoking-related illnesses.
It was revealed in a Senate hearing on Tuesday that the fund,
which has the job of helping meet the Commonwealth's superannuation
liabilities, had acquired a stake in the Czech Republic division of
cigarette maker Philip Morris.
The Czech division outraged tobacco industry opponents in
2001 when it commissioned a report from consulting firm Arthur D. Little
International which found the savings to public finances from smokers'
early deaths, together with cigarette tax revenue, outweighed the burden
of smoking related healthcare and other costs.
The company later issued a statement saying it ''deeply
regrets any impression from this study that the premature deaths of
smokers represent a benefit to society''.
The fund acquired the stake, now worth about $200,000, last May, but
it was only revealed on Tuesday after questions from Greens senator
Richard Di Natale. The $84 billion fund announced last October its
governance committee was reviewing its tobacco investments.
Fund managing director Mark Burgess would not say when the review would be completed.
Mr Burgess said the fund held investments in 15 tobacco
manufacturers, worth a total of $221 million. He said the fund did not
directly invest in tobacco stocks but owned shares in tobacco companies
through external fund managers who chose the stocks.
Senator Di Natale said the fund's tobacco holdings showed its
policy on environmental, social and governance issues was ''pretty
useless'', but Mr Burgess insisted its policy was ''world class''.
In 2011 the fund stopped investing in landmines and cluster munitions.
Australia is a signatory to the World Health Organisation
Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which recommends governments
have no financial interest in tobacco, but this is a non-binding
guideline.
Senator Di Natale, who wants the fund to drop its tobacco
investments as soon as possible, said he was ''disappointed that we're
investing in a company that believes that it's good health policy and
good economic policy to encourage people to smoke''.
He said among the tobacco companies the fund had invested in
was an Indonesian firm that had added sweetened filter tips and had
sponsored schools.
theage.com.au 13 Feb 2013
The government has zero interest in the well being of its citizens. Apparently you have a choice to smoke or not.
The government rakes in approximately $5 billion annually from Victorian's smoking habits.
Government actually support their multinational brethren, rather than hinder their business practices, irrespective how detrimental it is to the general population, as they are mere cannon fodder.
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