RECORDER REPORT

ISLAMABAD: The government should take strict measures to curtail immense influence of the tobacco lobby over all the legislative bodies and avoid giving tax benefits to the multinational companies.

This was revealed in a research study, “Regional Tobacco Tax Regime and Its Implications for Health” released here on Saturday by the Sustainable Development Policy Institute (SDPI) – a think-tank in Islamabad.

The study said the laws against tobacco products including cigarettes, should be implemented in letter and spirit as well as without any discrimination.

Apart from this, the statistically false claim of tobacco companies regarding the illicit trade of cigarettes should be rejected and no favours should be offered to them in taxation, it said.

The ruling elite should also keep distance from the tobacco industry, the study suggested, adding that it is very important because the industry would use it as a vehicle of their influence and interest.

It said that in such circumstances, the tobacco lobby becomes powerful enough to demand tax relaxations in the name of illicit trade.

The authorities suspect figures fudging to evade tax, it said, adding that while the consumption figures stand at a whopping 86.6 billion cigarettes per year, the official figures by the industry remain restricted to 55 billion only.

The rest is usually blamed on illicit trade, but the volume of illegal trade is not more than nine percent which is way less than the tall figure of 41 percent being reported by companies, it said.

Therefore, the average price of a cigarette pack in Pakistan remains the lowest in region, thereby affecting not only the revenue generation by tobacco industry but also causes severe health repercussions, it said.

The study suggested that a uniform tax system needs to be enforced at all levels, so as to control tax evasion, urging the government to abolish the tier system that was providing tax evasion opportunities to tobacco companies.

The single-tiered system would help not only strengthen the revenue generation mechanism, but also the problem of illicit trade could be dealt with effectively.

In Pakistan, there are 22 million tobacco users, wherein 60 percent are adolescents. Resultantly, 1.5 million cases of oral cancer are reported by Pakistan Medical Association on a yearly basis.