| National Commission on Marihuana and Drug Abuse  History of Tobacco Regulation* TOBACCO REVENUES
 A peculiar relationship exists between production and revenue. In 1970, cash receipts
from tobacco brought in $11 million for Pennsylvania; tobacco farmers and cigarette taxes
amassed $194.6 million for the state. By comparison growers in North Carolina collected
$576 million while the state collected only $13.4 million in cigarette revenues (USDA,
Tobacco Situation, 1971b: 43).  The federal excise tax on a package of cigarettes is currently eight cents and has
remained so since 1951. The combined state and federal tax was highest in Pennsylvania; 26
cents for 20 cigarettes, which was 58.2% of the retail price. Connecticut's 24 cents and
Texas's 23.5 cents were close behind; the average for the United States was 46.8%.  To the Federal and state governments today, tobacco is a financial asset. The total
federal and state revenue collected f rom all tobacco products in 1971 amounted to over
$4.7 billion. Local governments excised the product further bringing the sum total to $4.8
million (USDA, Tobacco Situation, 1971b: 44).  From the years 1890 to 1930 cigarette tax collections from tobacco soared from
approximately $1 million to over $339 million. By 1950, they exceeded $1.2 billion.  Totals for the years 1890 to 1970 are recorded in the following chart (Tobacco Tax
Council, 1970: 5)
 Cigarette tax  
  
    | Years | Collections |  
    | 1890 | $1,100,000 |  
    | 1900 | 4,000,000 |  
    | 1910 | 7,900,000 |  
    | 1920 | 151,300,000 |  
    | 1930 | 359,800,000 |  
    | 1940 | 533,000,000 |  
    | 1950 | 1,242,800,000 |  
    | 1960 | 1,863,600.000 |  
    | 1970 | 2,036,100,000 |  
    |  |  |  
 |