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BUSINESS: CIGARETTE SMUGGLING
Smoke Alarm
Contraband cigarettes invade India, burning holes
in the pockets of the domestic industry and the Government
By Rohit Saran
Before you finish
reading this sentence some 15 cigarettes would have been smuggled into
India. That would be only a fraction of the 6.7 million cigarettes that
are sneaked into the country each day. That's more than 200 million cigarettes
a month. From the land, the sea and the sky. From the friendly borders
of Nepal and the not-so-friendly borders of Bangladesh to the hostile
boundaries of Pakistan. From the world's best-known brands to completely
unheard of ones, foreign cigarettes of all shapes, sizes and origins are
swamping Indian markets.
Their main weapon: price. Almost all smuggled
brands are priced at Re 1 a cigarette and are of king size (above 80 mm
in length). That's less than even the excise duty (Rs 1.45) on king-size
cigarettes made in India. The cheapest Indian king-size cigarette is sold
for Rs 2.50, two-and-a-half times more expensive than a smuggled one.
No
wonder brands as obscure as Aziz Gold, Gold Leaf, Banani Gold and Royal
Edinburgh are selling across the country. "Cigarettes from Bangladesh,
Myanmar, Pakistan and other countries have flooded the remotest corners
of India," said A.C. Sarkar, director, Tobacco Institute of India,
in a letter to the chairman of the Central Board of Excise and Customs
in May.
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"The
illegal trade has made a dent in the industry's sales volumes."
Kurush Grant, CEO, Tobacco division,
ITC
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The cigarette industry has been protesting against
smuggling for more than a year. But the Government thought of it as no
more than a smoke screen for additional protection. That's because till
March this year smuggling was restricted to premium global brands like
State Express 555 (se 555), Benson & Hedges (B&H) and Marlboro
Lights. Though high in value, the smuggling of these brands wasn't as
visible because it catered to a tiny premium segment of smokers.
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SUTL
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Duty Free
» I.S.C.
» Singapore Ship Stores
» Thailand
» Indo-China
» Indonesia
Duty Paid
» Myanmar
» Cambodia
G.T.
» Bangladesh
» Pakistan
» Thailand
» Vietnam
» Laos
» Afghanistan
» INDIA
JOINT VENTURE
» Myanmar
» Cambodia
» H.C.M. City
Source: Illegal Pathways to Illegal
Profits, Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids
Based on a BAT document (No. 500045603)
the diagram shows BAT's agent SUTL was responsible for promoting
cigarette smuggling into India. GT stands for general trade, a euphemism
for illegal trade.
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March 2001 changed the spectrum of smuggling
completely. The 15 per cent excise-duty surcharge imposed on cigarettes
in the Union budget drove most Indian tobacco companies out of the Re
1 filter cigarette market. Prior to the budget, Re 1 cigarettes (both
filter and non-filter) commanded nearly a third of the market. Once Indian
companies vacated this lucrative segment, the market was open for smuggled
brands.
What compounds the damage is that all smuggled
cigarettes are of king size, whereas the Indian Re 1 cigarettes are of
less than 70-mm size (called regular filter). Which means a Bangladeshi
king-size filter cigarette is cheaper than an Indian regular-size filter
cigarette. This poses a direct threat to the filter segment, which is
69 per cent of the Indian cigarette market (see table).
To be sure, much of the import of cheap cigarettes
is actually bootlegging. Cigarettes are purchased legally in neighbouring
countries but are sold illegally (without paying customs duty) in India.
But there is a more disturbing form of smuggling involving regular sale
of large consignments of cigarettes in the black market without paying
any taxes in either the country of manufacture (because they are shown
as exports) or the country of sale (because they are smuggled in). There
are allegations that cigarette MNCs are-directly or indirectly-smuggling
their premium brands into India.
What gives credence to such allegations is the
easy and widespread availability of foreign-made premium brands in India.
Even the foreign brands manufactured in India-B&H and se555-are being
smuggled in huge quantities and sold at the same counters as the Indian
make. Both brands belong to the UK-based British American Tobacco (BAT)
Group and are made in India by ITC, 31 per cent of which is owned by BAT.
Though there is no proof of BAT's direct involvement in smuggling to India,
there are documents and reports that hint at the company's intention to
encourage illegal imports into Asian countries, including India.
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