In a Puff of Smoke:
A Pack a Day: The Costs
How much does cigarette smoking cost? A lot, even if you leave out the health costs, which, of course, are most important. In 1999, in the United States, the total cost of smoking was approximately $100 billion in health care cost and lost productivity. What does it cost in dollars, real and immediate, not the dollars you lose in future income or the ones you spend on doctor visits? Do a little math and figure it out, and then ask what you could have done with the money.
Let's assume that cigarettes cost $2.50 per pack.
Now if you are a nonsmoker, here's the good news for you. If you had been a pack-a-day smoker, your habit would have cost you $75 per month and $912.50 per year. Those figures represent money spent by smokers.
Here are some expanded data:
| Monthly Cost | Annual Cost | 20 Years* | 30 Years* | 50 Years* | |
1.0 1.5 2.0 |
$ 37.50 75.00 112.50 150.00 |
$ 450.00 900.00 1350.00 1800.00 |
$ 28,476 56,952 85,429 113,905 |
$ 84,768 169,536 254,304 339,073 |
$ 649,664 1,299,329 1,948,993 2,598,658 |
* Cost with 10% annual interest.
These numbers show what would happen if:
And so you don't forget the health costs, here are some facts:
Magic Bullets Directory | Site Map | Pharmaceutical Achievers Home