How African countries lose Sh1tr to illicit tobacco trade
Cigarette manufacturers operating in Africa are creatively fuelling illicit tobacco trade in a bid to evade taxation. This is leading to tax losses for African governments estimated to be in excess of a trillion shillings annually. The firms, which are subsidiaries of big tobacco multinationals, are reportedly selling cigarettes to their sister companies in markets where tax rates are low, which in turn sneak the now contraband cigarettes into high tax regime markets for sale in black markets.
Thus while the cigarette companies are able to recoup their costs and make margins on the products, tax authorities get significantly low revenues from taxes on tobacco products. The European Union has also been hit by such tricks by cigarette firms and is estimated to be losing €20 billion (Sh2 trillion) in taxes.
Related Posts
Customs foils distribution of P10.1-M smuggled cigarettes in ZamBaSulta area
Hundreds of cases of smuggled cigarettes intended for distribution in the...
Philips Alerts on Counterfeit Products In Nigeria
Royal Philips yesterday lamented that over 50 per cent of products bearing its...
Container of cigarettes seized in Ctg
Chattogram Custom House and Customs Intelligence seized a container of...
Village distillery churns out fake premium liquor, busted
A gang that produced spurious liquor and distributed it as premium liquor brands...


