Table 2 Revenue from youth smoking in 2002, grades 8–12, by race and manufacturer.
White | Black | Other | Total | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Philip Morris | $658865368 | $9841865 | $22526908 | $691234141 |
(column %) | 61% | 13% | 51% | 58% |
Lorillard | $152794670 | $50605691 | $9847641 | $213248002 |
14% | 68% | 22% | 18% | |
RJ Reynolds | $130727841 | $2807430 | $4156001 | $137691271 |
12% | 4% | 9% | 12% | |
Brown & Williamson | $20080592 | $2177457 | $1037952 | $23296000 |
2% | 3% | 2% | 2% | |
Other | $113876129 | $8579057 | $6449349 | $128904535 |
11% | 12% | 15% | 11% | |
Total | $1076344600 | $74011500 | $44017851 | $1194373949 |
100% | 100% | 99%* | 101%* |
*Does not equal 100% because of rounding.
Revenue based on reported youth brand preferences as follows: Brown & Williamson (GPC, Kool), Lorillard (Newport), Philip Morris (Marlboro, Parliament, Virginia Slims, Basic), and RJ Reynolds (Camel, Winston, Doral). The period reported in this table is before the merger of RJR and B&W, thus the data are presented separately. Race is reported as “white”, “black” and “other” in the MTF public use data files.