Daily Dispatch

Cigarette lockdown ban: Big brands still suffering as smokers choose cheap

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The legal multinatio­nals’ market share of the sale of cigarettes went from 70% (pre-ban) to 33% (in ban) to 50% (post-ban), a survey shows.

The prohibitio­n did not prevent smoking either: 85% of smokers kept smoking during the cigarette ban, only 8% quit and half of those who stopped smoking indicated they started smoking again once the ban was lifted.

This data is provided in the latest National Income Dynamics Study – Coronaviru­s Rapid Mobile survey (Nids-cram).

Tobacco sales were prohibited between March 25 and August 17 as part of the government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic.

There were about 6.7 million adult smokers in SA before the start of the lockdown, the report estimates.

The average daily number of cigarettes smoked by smokers decreased from 7.9 cigarettes in 2017 to 6.5 cigarettes during the sales ban and up to 8.8 cigarettes after the ban.

Adjusted for inflation and expressed in constant November 2020 prices, the average price of cigarettes increased by nearly 200% between 2017 and the highest point it reached during the sales ban.

Total expenditur­e on cigarettes (equivalent to total gross turnover of the tobacco industry) changed from an annualised R32.1bn just before the ban to an annualised R72.9bn at the peak of the sales ban, and fell to R31.3bn once the prohibitio­n was lifted.

The sales ban hurt the multinatio­nals - British American Tobacco, Philip Morris and Japan Tobacco Internatio­nal - but greatly benefited the non-multinatio­nals, of which the prominent companies are Gold Leaf Tobacco Corporatio­n, Carnilinx, Best Tobacco Company and Amalgamate­d Tobacco Company.

“Whereas the multinatio­nals had an estimated market share of more than 70% pre-lockdown, this decreased to 33% during the sales ban. After the sales ban was lifted, the market share of the multinatio­nals recovered to just more than 50%,” the report said.

“Very sharp increases in the retail prices - more than 400% at the peak of the sales ban together with a 70% increase in sales volumes, meant that the total estimated gross turnover of the non-multinatio­nals increased very sharply during the sales ban.

“Even after the lifting of the ban, the total gross turnover of this group is probably more than double what it was before the ban.”

The National Treasury budgeted that R15bn would be collected from tobacco excise taxes in the 2020/21 financial year. The 20-week sales ban means the government lost about R5.8bn during this period.

“There are no angels in the industry. All tobacco companies, both the multinatio­nals and the locally based companies, have been accused and/or found guilty of various kinds of wrongdoing,” said the report.

“The non-multinatio­nals, which more than the multinatio­nals have previously been found to sell cigarettes at prices at which it is impossible for the full tax to have been paid, have benefited disproport­ionately from the ban.

Clamping down should be a national priority, said the report.

Even after the lifting of the ban, the total gross turnover of this group is probably more than double what it was before the ban

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