logo
While Australia is aggressively taxing tobacco, the black market flourishes

While Australia is aggressively taxing tobacco, the black market flourishes

The Guardian19-03-2025
The black market for tobacco has flourished in the shadow of Australia's aggressive tax policy, creating a lucrative opportunity for organised crime. As legal tobacco prices have soared, criminal networks have profited by undercutting legal products, offering smokers a cheaper alternative that circumvents regulation and taxation. This underground economy has expanded dramatically in recent years, fuelling criminal turf wars and undercutting tax revenues.
The sporadic but aggressive increases in tobacco excise are the primary driver of the illicit trade. Australia's policy, implemented with the dual aim of reducing smoking rates and boosting government coffers, has created some of the world's highest cigarette prices. Despite mounting evidence of unintended consequences, and prior knowledge of these risks, government officials remain inflexible, rejecting even temporary pauses in tax hikes.
Proponents of ever-increasing tobacco taxes often dismiss industry opposition through what they call the 'scream test' – the notion that the louder tobacco companies protest, the more effective a policy must be. This simplistic reasoning conveniently ignores a troubling reality: while prices have increased due to the excise tax, Big Tobacco's profit margins have also increased considerably. Before taxes are applied, Australia's cigarette prices rank among the highest in the world, suggesting that the 'big three' cigarette manufacturers have opportunistically used tax increases as cover for their own price gouging.
While public health advocates continue to recite the World Health Organisation's mantra that taxation represents 'the single most effective and cost-effective measure' to reduce smoking in the population, the evidence supporting this claim in Australia is weak in recent years. Despite the policy's centrality to our tobacco control strategy, no formal evaluation has been published since the major tax increases started in 2010 – an astonishing oversight for such a consequential intervention.
Much has changed over the past two decades. Prices are much higher and smoking rates have fallen, becoming increasingly concentrated in disadvantaged groups in the community. The absence of rigorous assessment should raise serious questions about whether assumptions and ideology, rather than evidence, are driving policy decisions.
Available data paints a picture at odds with tax advocates' confident assertions. Smoking rates have declined remarkably – but at similar rates during periods with and without significant tax increases. This suggests minimal impact from the tax hikes themselves.
The graphs below display two trends from 2000 to 2022-23: the percentage of adults who smoke daily (according to the National Drug Strategy household survey from 2000 to 2022-23 ) and the price breakdown of a common cigarette brand (showing both tax and pre-tax components).
The relationship between cigarette pricing and consumption appears far more complex than the simplistic elasticity models upon which policy has been based. The fact that smoking rates fell during periods of price stability indicates that shifting social attitudes and cultural norms around tobacco use, as well as policies such as smoke-free areas, are playing significant roles in reducing smoking prevalence. This nuance has been largely ignored in policy discussions fixated on tax as a silver bullet.
Furthermore, the growth of the black market fundamentally undermines the health aims of the tobacco excise. By creating parallel distribution channels offering cigarettes far below retail prices, high taxes have expanded access to cheaper tobacco products. For price-sensitive smokers, the black market provides an alternative to quitting. This diminishes the intended health benefits of tax rises. It also deprives the government of billions in revenue and enriches criminal enterprises.
This is particularly troubling when we consider who bears the heaviest burden of these taxes. Those unable to quit are disproportionately and increasingly concentrated among disadvantaged groups who are least able to absorb these financial imposts. The policy effectively functions as a regressive tax, deepening inequality and penalising the poor. This might be justified to the extent that tax increases are saving lives, but it is not clear that the policy is delivering on its public health promise.
Smoking remains a vitally important public health issue. A comprehensive, evidence-based review of Australia's tobacco pricing strategy is long overdue. We need an honest accounting of both the benefits and costs of pricing policies, acknowledging the complex interplay between pricing, social factors and illicit markets. Without such analysis, we risk continuing a policy approach that imposes significant economic hardship on disadvantaged smokers and may not deliver proportionate public health gains – and inadvertently strengthening organised crime.
The time has come to look beyond ideological commitments and engage with the uncomfortable reality we find ourselves in.
Edward Jegasothy PhD is a senior lecturer at the Sydney school of public health at the University of Sydney. Dr Francis Markham is a fellow at POLIS: the centre for social policy research at the Australian National University
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How much more will it take for these so-called leaders to take action?
How much more will it take for these so-called leaders to take action?

The Herald Scotland

time5 days ago

  • The Herald Scotland

How much more will it take for these so-called leaders to take action?

This is forced starvation. The World Health Organisation reports that in this month 63 deaths were caused by malnutrition and that the position of [[Gaza]] is on a 'dangerous trajectory'. More than 100 non-Government organisations across the world have, rightly, called this mass starvation and pleaded for world-leaders to put pressure on Israel. Read More: How much more will it take for these so-called leaders to take action? Instead of the necessary and radical interventions we need – we are thrown a few crumbs to give the illusion of decisive action from Donald Trump and Sir Keir Starmer when they feel public opinion turning too far and too quickly. A few crumbs whilst Gaza starves. Donald Trump managed to call it 'real starvation' during another bumbling press conference. But what he failed to say was that this is a man-made horror that America and Israel are responsible for. The 'Gaza Humanitarian Foundation' is an American 'non-profit' working with the Israeli Government, and it has enabled aid to be used as a weapon of war. Israeli forces have killed almost 1000 people who were desperately queuing for aid and who assumed they are entering a safe zone. Many Gazans leave to search for food for their families who are waiting in make-shift shelters, but never return to them. The failed Gaza Humanitarian Foundation issued a 'women-only' aid pick-up invitation to desperate civilians this week, in an attempt to prevent scenes of chaos, and to manufacture the idea that chaos and deaths were being caused by Gazan men. But it did not stop the killing. Pepper spray and stun guns were used on the women queuing, some with their children. Multiple women were killed as security forces shot directly at them. Perhaps now will be the time when those individuals and groups who purport to care about women's lives across the world will raise their voices for the women of Gaza? Given some of their silence for 21 months, perhaps not. The chaos is not caused by desperate and starving civilians, it is caused by an aid agency that has never fully met the needs of the desperate and starving and a Government pursing any means available to them to erase the Palestinian people. Keir Starmer has called it 'unspeakable and indefensible' despite having repeatedly defended Israel's action; he stated that Israel had the right to stop Gazans having access to life-saving clean water in October 2023. Starmer has announced that 30 children in need of emergency care will be evacuated by the UK. The United Nations estimated that 33,000 children have been injured. The Prime Minister has also announced that the UK will be facilitating air drops of aid, which humanitarian charities have called a 'grotesque distraction' and a method that will do nothing to curb the growing levels of starvation. Israel has issued a 'pause' in high populated areas of Gaza for 10 hours a day since Sunday to allow air dropped aid to enter. But aid agencies have warned this will be a negligible amount gives the scale of starvation, especially whilst the hundreds of trucks needed for daily aid continue to be blocked at the border. In a moment that felt particularly cruel, Starmer announced that the UK will recognise Palestine as a state, unless [[Israel]] takes moves on a ceasefire; using statehood as a negotiation tool and a threat. Starmer said to Labour members in an email released last night 'I've always said that [[Palestine]] statehood is the inalienable right of the Palestinian people' Really? Then why is that right based on conditions linked to its oppressor? If world leaders want to take decisive action, the answers have been in front of them since the start. End arms sales to Israel, recognise Palestine as an independent state, demand a permanent ceasefire, apply pressure on Israel through trade and economic sanctions. These are evidenced and proportionate responses that have been applied to other nations, why not now? During apartheid in South Africa, the UK repeatedly vetoed UN resolutions calling for immediate economic sanctions, it was not until the late 1980s that the UK and US passed laws in support of trade sanctions against South Africa. The UK and US appear to have learnt no lessons, and are repeating the same mistakes. Whilst they may be ignorant of their own histories, neither the UK nor the US can say that they were unaware of the realities on the ground in Gaza. Beyond the devastating pictures released daily, the language from Israeli officials has been clear in their intention from the start. In the International Court of Justice hearing on probable genocide by Israel, over 500 statements were entered into the record as evidence of 'intention' of genocide. These public statements were from Israeli officials and included Israel's president, Isaac Herzog, who stated that 'It's [Palestine] an entire nation out there that is responsible.' Netanyahu has himself said that the 'war' will continue until all of Gaza is under Israeli military control. The intention has been clear, and the perpetrators have been able to continue with impunity as a consequence of the cowardice of so-called 'world leaders.' As author Omar El Akkad said; "One day, when it's safe…when it's too late to hold anyone accountable, everyone will have always been against this." Talat Yaqoob, is an independent consultant, researcher and campaigner, see

City boss is suing his neighbours for £25,000 over their guard dogs' noise... after he counted 74 barks in 24 hours and noted it in his barking diary
City boss is suing his neighbours for £25,000 over their guard dogs' noise... after he counted 74 barks in 24 hours and noted it in his barking diary

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

City boss is suing his neighbours for £25,000 over their guard dogs' noise... after he counted 74 barks in 24 hours and noted it in his barking diary

A city boss has sued his neighbours for £25,000 after complaining their dogs bark too much. Filippo Alloatti claims his family have to leave their home in Streatham, west London, every weekend to escape the supposed constant racket from two German Shepherds living next door. It has also meant his wife has been forced to abandon her clothing business which she ran from home, while his three children, aged 16, 15, and 11, have been unable to concentrate on their homework. Mr Alloatti, who works as head of finance for an investment firm, has been keeping track of the dogs' barks since 2021 in his own 'barking diary' and once counted 74 barks in just 24 hours, according to High Court papers. The animals produce such a racket that they breach World Health Organisation guidelines and are also being trained to bite on sleeves, the 43-year-old also claimed in documents seen by the Sun. Mr Alloatti is seeking £25,000 damages from neighbours Mohammed and Saima Uddin as well as an injunction to remove the dogs or have them locked up at night. He has reportedly tried to resolve the issue with his neighbours directly before seeking help from the council and the police. But businessman Mr Uddin and his wife disagree that the barking is excessive and unacceptable, the High Court claim says, as reported by the Sun. Councils can issue a Noise Abatement Order to anyone they believe is causing a 'statutory noise nuisance' - which includes their dogs barking excessively. They can then issue a fine of up to £5,000 if the person breaches this order and continues to make an excessive amount of noise. This is further increased to up to £20,000 for a factory or business.

City boss sues neighbours for £25k over their dogs' ‘loud and excessive' barking ‘which frightens his kids'
City boss sues neighbours for £25k over their dogs' ‘loud and excessive' barking ‘which frightens his kids'

The Sun

time6 days ago

  • The Sun

City boss sues neighbours for £25k over their dogs' ‘loud and excessive' barking ‘which frightens his kids'

A CITY boss is suing his neighbours over the noise from their dogs. Filippo Alloatti says his family have to leave their home at weekends and holidays to escape the barking. 3 3 The dad of three, head of finance at an investment firm, claimed he counted 74 barks from two German Shepherds in 24 hours. He wants £25,000 damages from owners Mohammed and Saima Uddin and an injunction to get the dogs rehomed or locked up overnight. The animals were bought in 2021 as guard dogs and are being trained to bark on command and bite on sleeves, his High Court claim alleges. They bark loudly and excessively, mostly stay in the garden and rarely leave the six-bed home in Streatham, South West London, the paperwork adds. Mr Alloatti, 46, has kept a barking diary since 2021. His wife has given up her clothing business which she ran from home, it was claimed. Their children, aged 16, 15, and 11, have become frightened of dogs and cannot concentrate on their homework, the papers say. Noises exceeded World Health Organisation guidelines, according to the claim, while expert Colin Spender said the dogs were anxious and stressed. Mr Alloatti says they tried to resolve it with the Uddins and went to the council and police before starting legal action. Businessman Mr Uddin and his wife do not accept the barks are excessive and unacceptable, the High Court claim adds. I'm a are five dog breeds I would never own - they'll cost you a fortune Unlock even more award-winning articles as The Sun launches brand new membership programme - Sun Club. 3

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store