Illicit cigarette study is blowing smoke, says council on smoking and health
One out of three cigarettes smoked in Hong Kong last year was illicit, costing the government more than HK$3.2 billion in lost tax revenue, a study by two overseas think tanks says. But the Hong Kong Council on Smoking and Health (COSH) says the results are “dubious”. The Illicit Tobacco Indicator study – conducted by UK-based Oxford Economics and the International Tax and Investment Center (ITIC) in the US – suggests that the city’s illicit cigarette consumption rate stood as high as 33.6 per cent of 1.8 billion cigarettes smoked in 2013, causing a loss of HK$3.2 billion in taxes. Of the 14 countries studied, Hong Kong had the third highest consumption rate, after Brunei and Malaysia, which ranked first and second, respectively.
Related Posts
Software detects fake mobile, Wi-Fi networks
An Israeli company has developed a product it says can detect if a mobile device...
Fake medicine hits retail investors hard
Individual investors took a severe beating from the fake herbal medicine produced...
Fake currency worth ₹7.50 lakh seized, 9 held
The Bihar police has seized ₹7.50 lakh in fake currency notes of denomination...
Cigarettes worth Rs 1.46 crore seized at KIA incinerated
BENGALURU: A total of 7.3 lakh cigarette sticks, smuggled by flyers into...