New consumer campaign launched to assist in the fight against illicit cigarettes

11th August 2021 By: Tasneem Bulbulia - Senior Contributing Editor Online

South Africa’s tobacco industry is stepping up its campaign against illicit cigarette producers with a new educational campaign aimed at helping smokers distinguish between legal and illicit products.

The ‘Know What You Smoke’ campaign is hinged on an animated video that explains how the price of a packet of 20 cigarettes is the best way to identify illicit cigarettes.

“It’s all in the price,” says industry organisation the South Africa Tobacco Transformation Alliance (Satta) spokesperson Zacharia Motsumi.

“Just the cost of the taxes on a packet of 20 amounts to R21.60. That covers excise duty and value-added tax on excise only. But it doesn't include anything else – like the tobacco, the processing, manufacturing, distribution, wholesale or retail.

“So, if you see a pack of 20 on sale for less than R21.60, you should know there’s probably something wrong with it. Somewhere, somehow, the cigarettes are probably not fully compliant, or legal. And in that case, it’s best to avoid them altogether – or, if you can, report the matter to the police or other authorities,” he advises.

Motsumi says research done by market research and consulting firm Ipsos has shown that a packet of 20 illicit cigarettes can be bought for R6, with the average price of illicit packs being between R18 and R22.

“There is no way these products can be sold so cheaply, and the manufacturers are still paying taxes. We are now on an all-out campaign to explain this to smokers, and to expose how the illicit traders are getting away with tax evasion,” Motsumi emphasises.

Satta does this in the Know What You Smoke video by demonstrating the costs involved in the various stages of the tobacco industry value chain, from “seed to smoker”.

“At Satta, we are committed to producing quality cigarettes; adhering to all the regulations and paying the necessary taxes.

“Buying a pack of 20 for less than the minimum collectable tax of R21.60 means supporting illicit trade and, in the process, stealing taxes, putting tobacco farmers, processors and manufactures out of work, undermining the economy and supporting the wrong people.

“Our appeal to smokers is: know what you smoke, and in that way avoid the tax-dodgers. Let’s buy legal and protect the legal tobacco industry,” states Motsumi.

He emphasises that Satta supports all law enforcement agencies that are involved in the campaign against illicit traders, and that it was heartened by recent actions by the South African Revenue Services, in particular, that had led to the confiscation of consignments of illicit cigarettes.