Special communication
Cigarette smuggling in Europe: who really benefits?
Luk Joossensa, Martin Rawb
a International
Union Against Cancer, EU Liaison Office, Rue de Pascale 33, 1040 Brussels, Belgium, b Department of Public
Health and Epidemiology, Kings College School of Medicine and
Dentistry, London, UK
Correspondence to: Dr L Joossens. joosens{at}globalink.org
Cigarette smuggling, now on the increase, is so widespread and
well organised that it poses a serious threat to public health. This
threat comes from two principal directions. First, smuggling makes
cigarettes available cheaply, thereby increasing consumption. A third
of annual global exports go to the contraband market, representing an
enormous impact on consumption, and thus causing an increase in the
burden of disease, especially in poorer countries. It is also costing
government treasuries thousands of millions of dollars in lost tax
revenue. Second, the tobacco industry uses smuggling politically,
lobbying governments to lower tax, arguing that smuggling is caused by
price differences. This paper shows that the claimed correlation
between high prices and high levels of smuggling does not exist in
western Europe. In fact, countries such as Norway and Sweden, with
expensive cigarettes, do not have a large smuggling problem, whereas
countries in the south of Europe do. Cigarette smuggling is not caused
principally by "market forces". It is mainly caused by fraud, by
the illegal evasion of import duty. The cigarettes involved are not the
cheap brands from southern European countries, for which there is no
international market. It is the well-known international brands such as
Marlboro and Winston. We propose much tighter regulation of cigarette
trade, including an international transport convention, and a total ban on transit trade
sale by the manufacturers to dealers, who sell on to smugglers.
© 1998 by Tobacco Control
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