far behind other countries that have the political will
to impose excise duty on plastic-based goods as a
source of acceptance as well as an effort to control
in order to protect citizens and their respective
countries from negative impacts (Directorate
General of Customs and Excise Ministry of Finance
Republic of Indonesia, 2016).
Cigarettes are small bars that contain substances
that can cause addiction, dependence and even
death. In cigarettes, there are approximately 4000
types of chemicals that can endanger human health.
The diseases caused by smoking are catastrophic
such as cancer, heart disease, kidney failure, and
others. The health impact of tobacco and tobacco
products in the form of cigarettes has been
anticipated with the use of the excise itself. Based on
article 31 of the constitution (UU No. 28 tahun
2009) about district tax and district retribution, the
tax revenue of cigarettes, both in provincial and
district / city sections, is allocated at least 50% (fifty
percent) to fund public health services and law
enforcement by authorised personnel
(Indonesian
Government, 2009). The use of cigarette taxes in the
health sector is among others, for: procurement and
for the maintenance of facilities and infrastructure of
the health care units, the provision of adequate
public facilities for smoker activities (smoking area),
and to popularise the dangers of smoking, and to
generate public service ads about the dangers of
smoking
(Indonesian Government, 2009).
The regulation does not mention the negative
impacts caused by cigarettes, such as medical
expenses for smokers or for the people exposed by
smoke. The treatment of diseases caused by
cigarettes costs a lot of money. Indonesia is
currently in the process of realising universal health
coverage with national health insurance that has
been implemented since 2014. As we knew, BPJS
spending is much more than its revenue. One reason
for this is because 23.90% of BPJS spending is used
to finance the treatment of patients with catastrophic
disease
(Pardede, 2016). It is the reason why deficit
and BPJS has become a big issue in relation to
public health.
Based on article 25 of President Regulation
(Peraturan Presiden No. 111 tahun 2013) about
health insurance, there are several health services
not covered by BPJS, such as health problems due to
deliberate self-harm, and/or the consequences of
self-harmful hobbies. Future discourse to do with
BPJS will include the consumption of cigarettes as
one cause of health problems - a hobby that can
endanger the individual, so the disease and
subsequent cost caused by cigarettes is not borne by
BPJS. It is a discourse that should receive attention
and careful study because the financing of cigarette
disease treatment has swallowed much of the BPJS
budget. For example, in 2015, there were 1,211
cases of cirrhosis renal diseases costing Rp 1,613
billion, 757 cases of cancer costing about of Rp
1,413 billion, and 468 cases of stroke with a Rp 687
billion cost
(Hafizd, 2016). This is only three out of
the many diseases caused by cigarettes. From that,
we can also imagine how much cost has been
incurred, so it is no wonder that the treatment of
diseases caused by smoking causes the budget of
BPJS to become a deficit. In addition, Indonesia also
needs to pursue a health insurance policy
implemented in Thailand that emphasises additional
financing for high-cost diseases that could prevent
budget deficits
(Jongudomsuk et al, 2015).
5 CONCLUSIONS
There is a dilemma to do with the tobacco policy in
Indonesia; one side is favourable because of the high
taxes and help towards the state revenue, and on the
other side, it can bring a negative impact to public
health. The negative health impact also makes the
BPJS budget in deficit in the midst of Indonesia's
efforts to realise universal health coverage. There
needs to be an accurate review to resolve the tobacco
policy dilemmas such as cigarette tax increments,
tax revenue sharing for rehabilitative and curative
services for smokers, and an agreement to include
smoking diseases as a disease not covered by BPJS
in order to avoid the deficit.
REFERENCES
Ade, Mustami Adinda. Tarif Cukai Rokok Naik 10% di
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Ahsan, A. 2013. Ratifikasi FCTC, Kondisi Perekonomian
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