CORPORATE PROFILE
PHILIP MORRIS: King of the Cancer Trade By John Summa U.S. HEALTH OFFICIALS
ESTIMATE that 350,000 people will die this year from tobacco-related illness,
mainly cancer and heart disease. But Philip Morris, the ubiquitous cigarette
giant, still unabashedly maintains that there is no "conclusive proof of
a cause-and-effect relationship between cigarette smoking and chronic diseases."
Philip Morris chairman Hamish Maxwell is a pack-a-day smoker who, despite
repeated warnings by the American Medical Association, the U.S. Surgeon
General and other reputable health organizations, stands behind the company's
contention that cigarettes don't kill. There is a single explanation for
such obstinate behavior in the face of overwhelming medical evidence and
opposition: profits. Now ranked 10th in size among Fortune 500 industrial
firms, Philip Morris's 1989 revenues are expected to top $44 billion. Its
profits, the New York Times reports, are expected to rise about 20 percent
above 1988's of $2.34 billion. To be sure, Philip Morris markets more than
just "cancer sticks." Its December 1988 purchase of the food giant Kraft,
for $12.9 billion, has turned the tobacco company into a veritable emporium
for the American palate. The company also purchased General Foods in 1985
for $5.7 billion. Philip Morris now sells over 130 products induding: baked
goods, barbecue sauces, beers (Lowenbrau, Miller), candy, cereals (Post,
Fruit de Fibre), coffee (Brim, Maxwell House, Sanka), desserts (Cool Whip),
frozen foods, cheeses, pastas and soft drinks. But tobacco is still the
biggest earner, bringing in about 65 percent of the company's profits.
The company's cigarette brands include Marlboro, Virginia Slims, Benson
& Hedges, Merit and Parliament among several others. The company started
in England in 1847 where Philip Morris operated a shop; Morris began making
his own cigarettes seven years later. In 1919, U.S. stockholders gained
control of the company and in 1929 it opened its first factory in the United
States. It was during the Depression that Philip Morris really cracked
the U.S. market. When the companies that once made up the "Tobacco Trust"
all raised their prices, Philip Morris launched a campaign to market economy
cigarettes. This move was enormously successful. Under the tutelage of
marketing genius Joseph Cullman III, the company rapidly grew during the
post- World War II expansion of the economy as middle class demand for
cigarettes increased. But the opposition to smoking which began in the
1970s and gained steam in the 1980s presents new challenges, and demands
that Philip Morris exhibit new flexibility. Growing public awareness of
the dangers of smoking, the requirement that tobacco ads and packages carry
health warnings and stricter regulations against public smoking are taking
their toll on the tobacco industry. Per capita consumption of cigarettes
has declined since the mid-1970s and has fallen at an accelerating rate
in the 1980s. Cigarette sales are dropping by 2-3 percent per year in the
United States. Increasingly, smokers in the United States are snuffing
out their habits. Preserving the smoking culture Philip Morris is working
hard to keep a smoking culture alive. The cigarette giant advertises very
heavily in the print media and sponsors events like the Virginia Slims
women's tennis tournament. The company also publishes a glossy magazine
for smokers that reaches 12 million readers. According to Philip Morris,
the magazine offers a "calm and rational forum for less well-heard points
of view on issues of importance to smokers." Its May-June 1989 issue, for
instance, featured Governor James Maffin from North Carolina--the largest
tobacco producing state in the country--railing against "higher consumer
excise taxes." Other issues have presented articles about athletic smokers,
reports about the generosity of Philip Morris in the art world and editorials
slamming anti-smoking legislation as an attack on individual rights. Since
1971, Philip Morris and other tobacco companies have been constrained in
their marketing strategies by a federal prohibition on advertising cigarettes
on television and radio. Beginning in late 1989, Philip Morris introduced
a strategy to circumvent this ban. In exchange for $600,000, the National
Archives agreed to co- sponsor advertisements with the cigarette giant,
celebrating the 200th anniversary of the Bill of Rights. The ads feature
the original document and voices of prominent people, such as Martin Luther
King, Jr., from the Archives' voices collection. At the end of the ads,
Philip Morris' sponsorship is noted and the company's logo is displayed.
"The ads are clearly illegal" and designed to increase the sale of Philip
Morris' products, says John Banzhaf lll, Executive Director of Action on
Smoking and Health (ASH). If the exact same ad ended by saying "'brought
to you by the Golden Arches,' no one would doubt it was an ad for McDonalds,"
states Banzhaf, who is largely responsible for the passage of the 1971
law banning the broadcast of cigarette advertising. Philip Morris had several
reasons for running the ads, critics believe. First, the company hopes
to improve its image by associating itself with a revered document, the
Bill of Rights. Second, sneaking by the ban on television advertising in
this instance will get the company's foot in the door for future ads. If
it succeeds in this instance, asks Banzhaf, "what's to stop Virginia Slims
from running a one minute tribute to women athletes?" Third, Philip Morris
hopes to subtly support its civil liberties argument that citizens have
a "right to smoke." The prominence of Martin Luther King, Jr. in the ads
is designed to tie restrictions on smokers to restrictions on blacks' civil
rights, Banzhaf believes. The company's huge marketing and public relations
expenditures are paying off for Philip Morris. Though industry sales are
falling, Philip Morris' sales are expected to rise by up to a half a percent
in 1989. Philip Morris has increased its market penetration from 37.8 percent
in 1987 to around 40 percent, with Marlboro alone grabbing 25 percent of
the total demand. This success is not just a result of advertisements.
The company has also tailored its products to address U.S. health concerns.
The most recent example is its test marketing of a new tobacco product:
NEXT, a "de-nicotined" tobacco. According to Scott Ballin of the Coalition
on Smoking or Health, this is Philip Morris' response to Surgeon General
Koop's damning report on nicotine addiction, released two years ago. It
hopes to turn the medical evidence to its advantage as tobacco companies
did when they came out with low-tar cigarettes following the 1964 Surgeon
General warnings about tar in cigarettes. In reality, however, low nicotine
cigarettes may be more harmful than regular cigarettes. Because most smokers
are addicted to nicotine, Banzhaf explains, if they are smoking a low nicotine
brand "they will consciously and unconsciously adjust their smoking behavior"
to keep their level of nicotine intake constant. They will smoke more cigarettes
and hold smoke longer. Since the low nicotine cigarettes do not contain
lower amounts of tar, the consumers of low nicotine cigarettes will actually
increase their tar intake. Going international While the company is working
hard to maintain its U.S. sales, it is looking mainly to foreign markets,
particularly in the developing world, for future growth. The reliable medium
of television has become the key component of Philip Morris' international
marketing strategy. Since the 1971 ban in the United States, cigarette
advertising on television has gone international. Though the original Philip
Morris Marlboro Man has now become an anti-smoking activist, Philip Morris's
new Marlboro Man still rides into the sunset-- but only on television screens
in the Third World. Many poor citizens in developing countries will end
up spending what little money they have on cigarettes. Philip Morris and
other cigarette companies have lobbied hard for the U.S. government to
pressure foreign countries to reduce trade barriers to the cigarette trade.
The Reagan and Bush Administrations have assented, strong-arming countries
which restrict imports of U.S. cigarettes by using a distorted interpretation
of U.S. trade law. Section 301 of the U.S. Trade Act of 1974 allows the
United States to impose trade barriers on countries which discriminate
against U.S. imports; the Reagan and Bush administrations have used this
law only reluctantly-- except to advance the interests of U.S. cigarette
manufacturers over the objections of health activists in foreign countries
as well as in the United States. The strategy has been successful: in 1986,
Japan removed its barriers; Taiwan did so in 1987; and South Korea lifted
its restrictions in 1988. The pressure continues on other Asian countries,
notably Thailand. Japan may offer the biggest prize to cigarette makers
like Philip Morris. The government ended its monopoly on making cigarettes
several years ago and foreign firms wasted no time moving in. Philip Morris
has captured an estimated 7.5 percent of the market and is poised to expand.
Philip Morris and other tobacco companies have identified women and young
people as the big growth market in Asia, says Ballin. They are pitching
the "You've come a long way, baby" theme in their advertisements in the
Asian countries where women are starting to earn money of their own but
where few women smoke. About 90 percent of Japan's new smokers are children
and about 5,000 youths start smoking each day worldwide. Philip Morris
may also soon expand into Eastern Europe. The company is trying "once again
[to] beat out public health officials" in advancing their competing messages,
according to Richard Daynard, head of the Tobacco Products Liability Project.
"As the nations of Eastern Europe emerge from bondage to the Stalinist
system, Marlboro may be there to impose their own bondage," he says. Making
Philip Morris pay? Along with a rising health consciousness, one of Philip
Morris and other tobacco firms' greatest concerns is liability litigation.
Terminally ill smokers and their families, or families of the deceased,
are challenging cigarette manufacturers in court. By 1987, some 152 suits
were filed against makers of cigarettes. The first verdict favorable to
a plaintiff was handed down in 1988 in New Jersey, where $400,000 was awarded
to Antonio Cipollone, the widower of a cancer victim. In early January
1990, however, a federal appeals court overturned the verdict and ordered
a new trial. The effect the Cippolone ruling will have on Philip Morris
and other manufacturers is not clear. Ironically, the appeals court ruling
actually broadened the basis on which tobacco victims and their relatives
could make claims against tobacco companies and could also lead to larger
verdicts against cigarette makers. Daynard says that the decision will
make it "much easier to bring suits" against tobacco companies. He hopes
that now Wall Street will respond to the threat of large judgments against
tobacco firms and bring tobacco company stock values down. Until now, he
says, the companies have persuaded market analysts that the suits will
not hurt them. Concern with liability suits began in 1984, peaked during
1987-88, but has quieted since then, according to Jennifer Coury, a tobacco
industry analyst with Shearson Lehman Hutton. "Analysts are not concerned
about the recent litigation," Coury states. The costs of litigation are
so high that Coury and other analysts believe lawyers will be unwilling
to take tobacco cases. Since the original verdict in the Cippolone case,
Coury says, "the number of [willing] plaintiffs grew, but lawyers were
not willing to take the cases." It is easy to see why attorneys have been
reluctant to handle tobacco liability cases. While the tobacco companies
hope to win their cases, a crucial component of their strategy is to make
litigation extremely costly. The goal is "basically to make to make it
too costly [to bring] suits," explains Daynard. The plaintiffs' lawyers
in the Cippolone case, for example, have spent six years on the case and
have accumulated $3 million in expenses; the three tobacco company defendants,
one of which is Philip Morris, have spent an estimated $50 million. Plaintiffs
have to find attorneys who are willing to spare no expense. Daynard and
other tobacco opponents hope that the Cippolone ruling will change this,
making it less costly to sue and easier to win big verdicts against tobacco
manufacturers. Even if tobacco suits become more prevalent, Philip Morris
may be less vulnerable to them than its competitors. "Because [the company's]
market share has been rising so precipitously and since lung cancer takes
so long to develop," Daynard notes, Philip Morris is a defendant in a low
proportion of the cases relative to its current market share. In the near
and medium term future at least, slick advertising, brilliant marketing,
international expansion and cagey legal maneuvering seem likely to enable
Philip Morris not only to survive but to expand rapidly. Competitors and
critics alike recognize that Philip Morris is in a "position of preeminence
because they are smarter, quicker and faster than people in other [tobacco]
companies," Daynard says. But he adds "The question is whether [Philip
Morris's] technical competence should be a reason to ignore the basic moral
quality and public health" consequences of the company's product and marketing
techniques. The families of millions of deceased smokers should have no
difficulty answering this query.