Cigarette sales from 2016 to 2019: No noticeable reduction in smoking despite taxes, warnings

Updated 25 Dec, 2020

LAHORE: A review of the statistics from 2016 to 2019 of cigarette sales in Pakistan showed that despite the imposition of taxes and the increase in the proportion of health warnings, no noticeable reduction in the smoking was observed in the country.

As per Nielsen retail audit data, despite government’s consistent measures to increase taxes and tariffs, the consumption of cigarettes is stagnant.

“With every step to increase the price of cigarettes, a sizable faction of smokers move to low priced illicit alternatives,” data revealed.

Experts believed that this is due to illicit cigarettes being available in the market which constitutes more than 40% of the total market and it can even be an underestimation. With 80 billion cigarette sticks sold last year, the share of tax paying sector was around 50 billion while that of illicit market to be 30 billion giving 43% of the pie to illicit sector. Despite Government consistent efforts to discourage tobacco use, the consumption has remained stable in last four years.

It is pertinent to mention that illicit tobacco sector included locally manufactured tax evading cigarettes and smuggled cigarettes. It is the root cause of evading laws of minimum regulated price, selling to minors, selling loose cigarettes and ban of advertising and promotion schemes on cigarettes.

Annual reports of the top two tax paying cigarette manufacturers indicate that the market share of companies that sell cigarettes legally has been steadily declining since 2018, and the share of illicit cigarettes has been on a rise with one of company witnessing a volume decline of as much as 26% (versus same period in 2019).

As per industry estimates gleaned from the financial accounts of the listed companies, the prevalence of tax-evaded or illicit cigarettes is expected to increase significantly in the year 2020 with its share expected to exceed the 40% mark.

“Illegal cigarette companies have thwarted the government’s policy of making cigarettes inaccessible, which the government had deemed as possible by imposing increased taxes from time to time. Instead of the smoking trend being reduced in Pakistan due to the high cost of cigarettes, the consumers switched towards illicit brands because they are being sold for a lot less than the government mandated pack price which is approximately PKR 63,” added experts.

“The government’s top priority should be implementation of existing laws and controlling the ever growing illicit trade of cigarettes, if it is really serious to discourage smoking otherwise existing and new control initiatives will continue to be undermined,” said experts.

Copyright Business Recorder, 2020

Read Comments