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Illicit Tobacco and the Tobacco Industry. Roger Mapleson Smoke Free Wrexham Wrexham CBC Trading Standards. Illicit Tobacco and the Tobacco Industry. Brief look at the relationship of Transnational Tobacco Companies (TTCs) with illicit tobacco
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Illicit Tobacco and the Tobacco Industry Roger Mapleson Smoke Free Wrexham Wrexham CBC Trading Standards
Illicit Tobacco and theTobacco Industry • Brief look at the relationship of Transnational Tobacco Companies (TTCs) with illicit tobacco • In the last few years TTCs have been very pro-active warning of the threat posed by illicit tobacco • Do we actually have something in common with Big Tobacco?
What is illicit tobacco? • Cheap • Easily available • Global problem
What’s the harm? • Lost duty - £2 billion • Serious and organised crime • Lost business to legitimate retailers • Damage to community cohesion
What’s the harm? (2) • Makes it easier for existing smokers to smoke more and harder to quit • Makes it easier for children to start smoking (at least 2/3rds of adult smokers started age <18) • Manner of supply exposes children to other potential risks to their health and safety
What’s the harm? (3) • Undermines quit and prevention strategies • Increases health inequalities • Failure to protect children • Increases risk of failure to meet national prevalence targets • 20% by 2016 • 16% by 2020
Where is it? • Informal economy (black market) • Boot sales • Pubs and clubs • Under the counter at retail premises • Private (fag) houses • Facebook
What is Illicit Tobacco (1)? • Genuine tobacco – smuggled (No duty paid) • Cheap whites • Counterfeits
Market Share • Most recent HMRC data • 9% of all cigarettes • 36% of all Hand Rolling Tobacco (HRT) • Smoking prevalence is highest in poorest areas • Proportion of IT used in most deprived areas will be much higher
Scale and nature of the illicit trade pre 2000 • A very large proportion of IT was smuggled genuine product • Fuelled by massive over supply by TTCs to countries where there was little or no market. • ‘Lost’ in the supply chain and smuggled into UK and other countries.
Scale and nature of the illicit trade pre 2000 (2) • Overwhelming evidence of industry involvement in illicit trade worldwide • Evidence that illicit trade was a core part of the business of TTCs • Evidence of industry’s links to criminal organisations
Industry involvement was increasingly exposed • Academic research • Serious investigative journalism • Inquiries • Litigation • The illicit market began to change
Scale and nature of illicit trade post 2000 • Smuggled genuine product has been replaced by illicit whites but: • Genuine brands still smuggled • Evidence of continued industry involvement in illicit trade • Evidence that the industry has identified genuine product as counterfeit
Some examples (1) • In 2008 and 2010 in Canada five major tobacco companies pleaded guilty to aiding smuggling of non duty paid tobacco • In 2009 the ICIJ reported PMI, JTI, ITL and BAT had produced 30 billion cigarettes in Ukraine beyond what the country could consume, fuelling a $2 billion black market across the EU. • ICIJ = international consortium of investigative journalists
Some Examples (2) • In 2012 OCCRP published a major investigative report into JTI raising concerns that JTI ignored internal evidence of complicity with large scale smuggling. • OCCRP = organised crime and corruption reporting project
Some examples (3) • Jin Ling – the most prevalent illicit white • Manufactured by the Baltic Tobacco Factory in Kaliningrad and other Eastern European Countries • Has no legitimate market – made to be smuggled • Production: > 10 billion cigarettes a year • Raw tobacco supplied by TTC
Tobacco Industry “Research” • JTI Billion Pound Drop • PMI Project Star • Overstate the market share of illicit tobacco • Use HMRC upper estimates • Use empty pack surveys • Press releases and articles
Why are TTCs involved in smuggling? • Cheap tobacco is good for the industry • It keeps more people smoking • It makes it easier to recruit new smokers (especially children) • The industry makes money directly from the sale of illicit tobacco
Why are they now apparently so concerned? • Regulation • Further duty rises • Display ban • Standardised (plain) packaging • TTCs say that standardised (plain) packaging is a threat because it will be easier to copy (counterfeit) and it will increase the market in illicit tobacco
Tobacco industry manipulation of data on and press coverage of the illicit tobacco trade in the UK • An academic assessment that concluded that; “Industry claims that the use of Non UK Duty Paid/Illicit cigarettes in the UK is sharply increasing are inconsistent with historical trends and recent independent data. TTCs are exaggerating the threat of illicit tobacco by commissioning surveys whose methodology and validity remain uncertain, planting misleading stories and misquoting government data. Industry data on levels of illicit should be treated with extreme caution” Rowell A, Evans Reeves K, Gilmore AB. Tob Control Published Online First: 10th March 2014 doi: 10,1136/tobaccocontrol-2013-051397
Conclusions • TTCs have learnt from previous experience to use the illicit tobacco issue to their own advantage using mis-information, flawed arguments and their vast spending power to lobby against further regulation… • …especially Standardised Packaging. • We must not shy away from the issues raised by cheap tobacco for fear of being allied with the industry.
Contact Roger Mapleson Roger.Mapleson@Wrexham.gov.uk 01978 315761