Examining the power of the alcohol and tobacco industries in policymaking: Lessons and challenges for the Philippines and Singapore

Gianna Gayle Amul, Jean-Francois Etter
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 Aims: Transnational alcohol and tobacco corporations are expanding operations in Southeast Asia. This study has two objectives: to examine the power of the tobacco and alcohol industries in shaping tobacco and alcohol policies in the Philippines and Singapore and to identify key lessons and challenges for alcohol and tobacco control.
 Methods: We developed a conceptual framework from the literature on power and political, commercial and determinants of health. We collected data from official government documents, corporate documents, and news articles for content analysis on the tactics of the alcohol and tobacco industries. We also conducted 30 in-depth, anonymised interviews in the Philippines and Singapore and conducted a thematic analysis of the transcribed interviews.
 Findings: Transnational and national alcohol and tobacco corporations use various tactics to influence the policy process for alcohol and tobacco control in the Philippines and Singapore. These industries utilised lobbying, litigation or threat of litigation, revolving doors, and marketing to exercise their instrumental power. These industries exercised their structural power by exploiting their market dominance, and public-private partnerships, promoting self-regulation, and benefiting from regulatory capture. They tapped framing tactics, corporate social responsibility activities and public-private partnerships to exert their discursive power.
 Conclusions: The alcohol and tobacco industries’ exercise of instrumental, structural, and discursive powers is mutually reinforcing. Policymakers, researchers, and civil society organisations working on alcohol and tobacco control need to understand and tackle these powers in the context of power asymmetries within countries and consider the dynamics of local, national, and international laws and corporate practices.","PeriodicalId":162336,"journal":{"name":"The International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research","volume":"68 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-10-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The International Journal of Alcohol and Drug Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.7895/ijadr.417","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Abstract Aims: Transnational alcohol and tobacco corporations are expanding operations in Southeast Asia. This study has two objectives: to examine the power of the tobacco and alcohol industries in shaping tobacco and alcohol policies in the Philippines and Singapore and to identify key lessons and challenges for alcohol and tobacco control. Methods: We developed a conceptual framework from the literature on power and political, commercial and determinants of health. We collected data from official government documents, corporate documents, and news articles for content analysis on the tactics of the alcohol and tobacco industries. We also conducted 30 in-depth, anonymised interviews in the Philippines and Singapore and conducted a thematic analysis of the transcribed interviews. Findings: Transnational and national alcohol and tobacco corporations use various tactics to influence the policy process for alcohol and tobacco control in the Philippines and Singapore. These industries utilised lobbying, litigation or threat of litigation, revolving doors, and marketing to exercise their instrumental power. These industries exercised their structural power by exploiting their market dominance, and public-private partnerships, promoting self-regulation, and benefiting from regulatory capture. They tapped framing tactics, corporate social responsibility activities and public-private partnerships to exert their discursive power. Conclusions: The alcohol and tobacco industries’ exercise of instrumental, structural, and discursive powers is mutually reinforcing. Policymakers, researchers, and civil society organisations working on alcohol and tobacco control need to understand and tackle these powers in the context of power asymmetries within countries and consider the dynamics of local, national, and international laws and corporate practices.
审查烟酒行业在决策中的影响力:菲律宾和新加坡的经验教训和挑战
摘要# x0D;目的:跨国烟酒公司正在东南亚扩大业务。这项研究有两个目标:审查烟酒行业在塑造菲律宾和新加坡的烟酒政策方面的力量,并确定烟酒控制的主要经验教训和挑战。方法:我们从关于权力和政治、商业和健康决定因素的文献中开发了一个概念框架。我们从官方政府文件、企业文件和新闻文章中收集数据,对烟酒行业的策略进行内容分析。我们还在菲律宾和新加坡进行了30次深度匿名采访,并对采访记录进行了专题分析。调查结果:跨国和国家烟酒公司使用各种策略影响菲律宾和新加坡的烟酒控制政策进程。这些行业利用游说、诉讼或诉讼威胁、旋转门和营销来行使他们的工具性权力。这些行业通过利用其市场主导地位和公私合作伙伴关系,促进自我监管,并从监管俘获中受益,行使其结构性权力。他们利用框架策略、企业社会责任活动和公私伙伴关系来发挥他们的话语权。 结论:烟酒行业对工具性、结构性和话语性权力的行使是相互加强的。从事酒精和烟草控制工作的决策者、研究人员和民间社会组织需要在国家内部权力不对称的背景下理解和处理这些权力,并考虑地方、国家和国际法律和企业实践的动态。
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