The Malta Business Weekly

EU rules on tobacco taxation no longer deter smokers

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EU rules on the taxation of tobacco, while working well in terms of predictabi­lity and stability for EU Member State fiscal revenue, are less effective in deterring consumptio­n, an EU report found on Monday.

The European Commission's report evaluates EU rules on the taxation of tobacco (Council Directive 2011/64/EU on the structure and rates of excise duty applied to manufactur­ed tobacco).

According to the evaluation, increases in EU minimum rates for cigarettes and fine-cut tobacco, as set out in the Directive, only had an impact in a few EU Member States, which had very low levels of taxation in the first place.

The high number of smokers in the EU is still a matter of significan­t concern with 26% of the overall EU adult population, and 29% of young Europeans aged 15-24, smoking, says the report..

According to the Commission, the launch of the Europe's 'Beating Cancer Plan'

highlights the pivotal role of taxation in reducing tobacco consumptio­n, in deterring young people from smoking.

In addition, price gaps between Member States - the average price of a pack of cigarettes can range from €2.57 to €11.37 - represent a sufficient economic incentive for unintended high levels of cross border shopping.

The evaluation also highlights that the emergence of new products, such as e-cigarettes, heated tobacco products and new addictive products reveal the limits of the current legal framework.

The Commission's report concludes that a more comprehens­ive approach, taking on board all aspects of tobacco control including public health, taxation, the fight against illicit trade and environmen­tal concerns, is needed.

The current evaluation assesses the performanc­e of the Tobacco Taxation Directive against the evaluation criteria set out in the Better Regulation Guidelines.

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