Source: AllAfrica
Pressure Groups Want Higher Tobacco Tax - AllAfrica
February 19, 2010
Lungi Langa
The
National Council Against Smoking (NCAS) has urged finance minister
Pravin Gordhan to review tobacco tax rates in South Africa.
Gordhan announced that cigarette tax would increase by R1,24 per pack.
The
group accused government of sticking to a policy which kept tobacco
taxes low in favour of tobacco companies at the detriment of public
health and government revenues.
The group said South Africa's
tax rates on tobacco were among the lowest in the world. "Since 1997
government set the cigarette tax rate at 50% of retail price and
gradually increased it to 52% in 2002," the NCAS said in a statement.
It has remained at 52% since.
According to the NCAS smokers in
Ireland would part with R93 for a packet of 20 cigarettes which makes
up 79% of the retail price. They said the average tax incidence in the
27 member states of the European Union was 78%.
NCAS
spokesperson, Dr Yussuf Saloojee said the group hoped to meet with the
finance minister to alert him and his colleagues of the profits that
could be made by government if cigarette tax was increased.
He
said more people were also bound to quit smoking if the tax was
increased. "Research that has been conducted has shown that people are
in support of increased tax. Some say they would be more likely to quit
smoking if the tax was increased," said Saloojee.
"Increasing
costs will discourage children from starting to smoke. If a cigarette
costs 10c a child is at a better position to buy it," he said.
In
his speech Gordhan said government was taking a stronger stance on
alcohol abuse and would review the current tax benchmarks for alcohol
beverages.
Saloojee said the organisation welcomed this suggestion but said they expected the minister to apply the same stance on tobacco.
He
commended government for introducing laws that prohibited people from
smoking in public places but warned that the laws were not enforced.
According
to the World Health Organisation tobacco use killed about 100 million
people in the 20th century. If the current trends continue there will
be up to one billion tobacco-related deaths in the 21st century.
If
left unchecked, tobacco will cause more than eight million deaths by
2030 and 80 percent of these deaths will occur in the developing world.
Source: AllAfrica
Comments