Saturday Star

Cigarette ban failing its intention – study

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STAFF REPORTER

DESPITE the ban on the sale of cigarettes, it seems like the majority of smokers in the country have found a way to get their fix during lockdown.

This is according to a research report released this week by the University of Cape Town.

The report, which was released yesterday, has shown that more than 90% of smokers have bought cigarettes during the lockdown, despite the ban on tobacco sales.

But smokers have had to pay a substantia­lly higher price and many have had to purchase other unfamiliar brands, as their favourite brands were often unavailabl­e.

During the lockdown, essential services retailers and petrol station stores have been banned from selling alcohol and cigarettes. The government has justified the ban on studies showing that smoking can make people more susceptibl­e to serious complicati­ons from a Covid-19 infection.

The Research Unit on the Economics of Excisable Products at UCT, headed by Professor Corné van Walbeek, performed an online survey, which was completed by more than 16 000 respondent­s. The aim was to understand smokers’ behaviour during the lockdown period.

“Our unit has a strong public health focus and our research is often in conflict with the tobacco industry’s rhetoric. We do objective and rigorous research. We did not do this study to take sides with any grouping; we simply wanted to understand what was going on in smokers’ lives,” said Van Walbeek.

The survey, which was conducted between April 29 and May 1, showed that 41% of respondent­s indicated they had tried to quit and 39% were successful. Most of the people who quit had tried quitting previously.

Only 12% who had quit smoking successful­ly indicated they will start smoking when they can buy cigarettes again.

The research also showed that in the first two weeks of the lockdown, average consumptio­n increased to 11 cigarettes, but after President Cyril Ramaphosa announced the two-week extension to the lockdown on April 9, average consumptio­n decreased to nine cigarettes per day.

According to Van Walbeek the distributi­on network through which smokers buy their cigarettes has also changed considerab­ly.

Whereas formal retailers were the dominant outlets for cigarettes before the lockdown (56%), they have all but disappeare­d during the lockdown (3%). The number of people using street vendors has risen from 3% before the lockdown to 26%, while the proportion of people relying on house shops has risen from 4% to 18%.

Meanwhile 4% of survey respondent­s indicated that they had bought theirs through “drug dealers”, “smugglers”, or “black market traders”.

Van Walbeek believes that the ban is failing in what it was supposed to do.

“While the original intention of the ban was to support public health, the reality right now is that the disadvanta­ges of the ban greatly outweigh the advantages.

“People are buying cigarettes in large quantities. While one should not exaggerate the revenue potential of excise taxes on tobacco products, since it contribute­s only 1 percent of total government revenue, it is foolish to not collect that revenue.”

The Department of Co-operative Governance and Traditiona­l Affairs did not respond to queries last night.

 ??  ?? SANDF members and police officers enforce lockdown measures in Alexandra during the third day of the lockdown in March. | BONGANI SHILUBANE African News Agency (ANA)
SANDF members and police officers enforce lockdown measures in Alexandra during the third day of the lockdown in March. | BONGANI SHILUBANE African News Agency (ANA)

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