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Another criticism relates to the alleged preference of large tobacco companies towards small independent tobacco producers and sellers. Proponents of this argument argue that certain price restrictions prevent smallholder farmers from competing with „Big Tobacco“. Over the past two years, twelve states have successfully fought this argument in court, and the long-term implementation of the MSA continues in the United States. [Citation required] Although the movement of the established countries is different from that of the OPMs, these countries were also concerned about the effects of tobacco companies refusing to join the MSA. Settler countries feared that NPMs would be able to regulate their sales in order to stay financially afloat while being effective. On the basis of these two concerns, THE OPMs and the implementing countries wanted the MSAs to encourage these other tobacco companies to join the agreement. In the ten years since the agreement, many national and local governments have opted to sell so-called tobacco bonds. It`s a form of securitization. In many cases, bonds allow national and local governments to transfer the risk of a reduction in future agreements to bondholders. However, in some cases, obligations are supported by secondary commitments of government or local revenue, prompting some to view it as a perverse incentive to support the tobacco industry, on which they now depend for future payments of that debt.

[55] Programs like this one are a vital artery for smokers trying to quit, workers who try to protect themselves from the damage of second-hand smoke and prevent children from starting to smoke one day; However, states do not always use WMA funds for these efforts. Indeed, as we have already pointed out, although we receive huge sums of money annually from tobacco dwellings and we collect billions more in tobacco taxes; Over the past two decades, states have, on the whole, failed to fund tobacco reduction and cessation programs at the level necessary to reduce smoking rates. Attorney General Chris Koster announced the deal Monday and said it would allow the state to recover $50 million lost in arbitration and keep millions of dollars in future payments.