Sun.Star Pampanga

Counterfei­t cigarettes­made inside cladestine factories

- BY IAN OCAM PO FLORA Sun.Star Correspond­ent

CITY OF SAN FERNANDO — Gone are the days when counterfei­t cigarettes are smuggled into the country.

With the discovery of illegal cigarette factories in Pampanga and Pangasinan recently, illegal cigarettes are now made and packed clandestin­ely in big operations run by foreign nationals and local syndicates inside the country.

This clandestin­e operations remain on of the biggest problems to the source of livelihood to 43,960 farmers and about 300,00 other members of their families and about 1.56-M other industry workers and dependents, summing up to an estimated 1.93-M Filipinos who all depend on the tobacco industry.

Illegal cigarettes deprive government of revenue and are hurting the country’s legitimate tobacco industry. This recent developmen­t poses a serious concern for government and the tobacco industry sector and an urgent realizatio­n for the need to further efforts against illegal cigarette trade.

There is no current data on the number of illegal cigarettes clandestin­ely produced by syndicates in the country. There is, however, data on illicit domestic cigarette consumptio­n. The “Asia-11 Illicit Tobacco Indicator” study showed that the consumptio­n of domestic illicit cigarettes nearly tripled to 17.1 billion in 2013 alone. This is a big leap from only 6.1 billion in 2012.

Even the Oxford Economics and Internatio­nal Tax and Investment Center said that the potential revenue loss for government from illegal cigarettes was at P15.6 billion in 2013.

Illicit cigarettes are domestical­ly produced cigarettes; illegally sold and consumed without paying applicable taxes depriving government of revenue and run in competitio­n with legal, taxed cigarettes in the market. Smuggled cigarettes on the other hand are produced from internatio­nal sources and shipped to the Philippine­s or vice versa.

The Oxford Economics and Internatio­nal Tax and Investment Center also said that tax losses in 2013 alone from illicit cigarettes was at 497 percent and went to P15.6 billion from P2.6 billion in 2012.

In 2015, Oxford Economics senior economist Oliver Salmon said that significan­t price increases over the last few years have led to the erosion of the legal market for cigarettes, with the illicit trade filling the gap.

The country’s total legal cigarette consumptio­n is currently at 80.4 percent. This only accounts to an estimate of 82.3 billion cigarettes.

Big players in the cigarette manufactur­ing business have also joined in efforts to curtail illicit cigarette consumptio­n. This as most of their popular cigarette brands are often the victims of counterfei­ting.

Recent efforts

The Department of Finance reported that fake cigarettes worth over P1 billion, fake tax stamps

worth approximat­ely P175 million in taxes, along with raw materials, machines for cigarette manufactur­ing and other parapherna­lia were seized by authoritie­s in separate raids in Pangasinan, Pampanga and Bulacan.

The Pangasinan raid was the biggest. Officials discovered four warehouses found to be counterfei­ting popular cigarette brands in Villasis, Pangasinan which led to the seizure of various materials for cigarette manufactur­ing and the arrest of 24 undocument­ed foreign nationals.

In Pampanga, a facility was found counterfei­ting popular cigarette brands. Officials seized “5.5 million pieces of fake unused cigarette strip stamps worth approximat­ely P175-million in excise taxes and VAT (value added tax).”

The Pampanga facility was reported to produce some 200,000 packs of cigarettes per day.

Just this October, P7.5 million worth of counterfei­t popular cigarette brands were confiscate­d by customs officials in two warehouses in Cagayan de Oro City, one of the biggest confiscati­on of counterfei­t cigarettes outside of the country’s custom ports. Officials confiscate­d hundreds of boxes of cigarettes brands, including Marlboro, Lucky Strike, Winstons, and Camel.

Just this year, there have been a dozen operations against illegal cigarettes resulting in arrests of vendors and distributo­rs in Cabanatuan City in Nueva Ecija, Santa Cruz in Manial, Guguinto, Bulacan and as far as Zamboanga City, Cebu and even Tacl oban.

Those arrested were charged for violating Section 155 in relation to Section 170 of Republic Act 8293, otherwise known as the Intellectu­al Property Code of the Philippine­s.

They could also be held for violating Republic Act 7394, or the Consumer Protection Act, and the National Internal Revenue Code, with penalties ranging from one year to 12 years imprisonme­nt and a fine of up to P200,000 or both.

No BIR stamp, No Sale

Last October 1, 2014, the BIR Revenue Memorandum Circular 72-2014 required all locally manufactur­ed cigarette packets to bear tax stamps. Imported cigarettes were required to have the same stamps in 2015.

The BIR said that this allows government authoritie­s to secure the distributi­on of cigarettes and also prevent and reduce illicit trade. It is, therefore, illegal for storeowner­s to sell unstamped cigarette packs.

The sale of cigarettes without necessary stamps is therefore considered illicit and opens criminal persecutio­n against the individual­s behind the sale and processing of such cigarettes.

Despite of this, illegal cigarette production continuous to be a problem as seen in different raids of clandestin­e facilities producing illegal cigarettes and the continuous sale of illegal cigarettes.

Unless government comes up with more concrete steps to reduce the sale of illegal cigarettes considerab­ly, illicit cigarette trade will continue to be a deteriorat­ing factor in the community as it reduces tax revenue intended for the national government and harms legitimate businesses of lawabiding tobacco manufactur­ers.

As of press time, fake cigarettes remain a big challenge to the country’s billion peso cigarette industry.

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