The Jerusalem Post

Equalizati­on of taxes on cigarettes and iQOS pleases health organizati­ons – and riles Philip Morris

- • By JUDY SIEGEL

The Finance Ministry has decided to equalize the taxes on Philip Morris’s heated-tobacco product iQOS with those on regular cigarettes.

Finance Minister Moshe Kahlon had stated numerous times that he would not do so because he “opposed raising taxes,” but he was under pressure from both the Dubek tobacco company, which claimed “discrimina­tion” against its products, and anti-tobacco activists who argued that all tobacco products were harmful to health.

Last year, Philip Morris placed huge advertisem­ents in newspapers claiming that its iQOS was safer than regular cigarettes and would reduce the risk of smoking. But the US Food and Drug Administra­tion has not approved its sale there, pending research showing whether and how much damage the product causes. It was then-health minister and now Deputy Health Minister Ya’acov Litzman who met with company representa­tives and arranged for Philip Morris to sell iQOS in stores here.

The Israel Cancer Associatio­n congratula­ted the decision to tax iQOS like other tobacco products but added that rolling tobacco, which is much cheaper than regular cigarettes and is becoming very popular among smokers, must have the same high taxes as regular smokes. It added that the smoking rate in the country increased significan­tly in the past year and that the very existence of iQOS threatened the progress of decades in reducing the smoking rate.

Dubek said the decision was to have been made after its appeal to courts last summer. It took credit for the Treasury’s change of policy.

The Philip Morris spokesman in Israel said it was “unfortunat­e and illogical that the state decided to limit smokers’ access to novel smokeless tobacco products by regulating and taxing them similarly to [convention­al] cigarettes, in full contradict­ion to the position taken by many government­s around the world and without thoroughly reviewing the science pertaining to these products.”

The company objected to fact that rollyour-own-tobacco had a much lower tax burden.

 ?? (Carlo Allegri/Reuters) ?? EQUAL TAXATION. Philip Morris’s iQOS heated electronic cigarette.
(Carlo Allegri/Reuters) EQUAL TAXATION. Philip Morris’s iQOS heated electronic cigarette.

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