Tobacco & Vaping 101: New Jersey
Taxpayers Protection Alliance
May 17, 2023
Lawmakers are often bombarded with misinformation on the products used by adults in their state. This annual analysis provides up-to-date data on the adults who use cigarettes and e-cigarette products in New Jersey. This information aslo includes data on youth use, impacts of e-cigarettes and analyses of existing tobacco monies.
Key Points:
- In 2021, 10.7 percent of adults were currently smoking in New Jersey. This is a 0.9 percent decrease from 2020.
- In 2021(among all New Jersey adults), 4.1 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds, 12.6 percent of 25–44-year-olds, 13 percent of 45–64-year-olds, and 8.2 percent of adults aged 65 years or older were currently smoking combustible cigarettes.
- Among all adults earning $25,000 or less in 2021, 17.2 percent were currently smoking compared to only 7.8 percent of adults earning $50,000 or more.
- Among all smoking adults in 2021, 57.5 percent were White, 19 percent were Hispanic, 16.3 percent were Black, 5.4 percent were Asian, 0.9 percent were Multiracial (non-Hispanic), and 0.8 percent identified as “Other.”
- Cigarette excise taxes in New Jersey disproportionately impact low income, low education persons, while failing to significantly reduce smoking rates among that class.
- The percentage of New Jersey adults earning $25,000 or less that were smoking decreased by 24.7 percent between 2015 and 2021, while the percentage of adults earning $50,000 or more who were smoking decreased by 38.8 percent during the same period.
- Among New Jerseyans who did not graduate high school, smoking rates decreased by 23.3 percent, while rates among adults with a college degree decreased by 53.9 percent.
- In 2021, six percent of New Jersey adults reported past-month e-cigarette use, which was a 36.4 percent increase from 2017.
- Youth vaping seems to have peaked in 2019 when 20 percent of youth reported current e-cigarette use. Between 2019 and 2022, current e-cigarette use declined by 53 percent.
- Traditional tobacco use among youth is at record lows. In 2022, only 1.9 percent of U.S. youth reported current cigar use, 1.6 percent reported current combustible cigarette use, and 1.3 percent reported using smokeless tobacco products.
- The introduction of e-cigarettes has not led to increases in cigarette smoking, but rather, correlates with significant declines in smoking rates among young adults.
- Between 2009 and 2017, smoking rates among New Jersey adults aged 18 to 24 years old declined by 52.3 percent. Since 2017, young adult smoking rates have decreased another 55.4 percent, with average annual declines of 30.3 percent.
- New Jersey woefully underfunds programs to prevent youth use of tobacco and/or vapor products and help adults quit smoking, while simultaneously receiving millions of dollars from the pockets of the adults who smoke. In 2021, for every $1 the state received in tobacco monies, it spent less than $0.01 on tobacco control efforts.
See the full analysis below:
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