A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Back to 500BC.
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Sunday, June 29, 2014
Don’t forget the beedis
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Editorial-June 28, 2014,
The dangers of smoking are well known and documented and given the
information age we live in, it is only the stupid who will indulge in a
habit the tobacco industry likes to call an ``adult choice.’’ We have
today run a report elsewhere in this issue saying that Mr. Walter
Laduwahetty, the President of the Sri Lanka Cancer Society, has written
to Health Minister Maithripala Sirisena congratulating him for the
campaign he has been running requiring the publication of pictorial
health warnings on cigarette packets and pledging the Cancer Society’s
support for this endeavour. More importantly, he has made a point we
ourselves did in this space some time ago: that given the price of a
single cigarette being over Rs. 25, very few people (especially in the
less affluent segments of society) buy their smokes in packets. They can
only afford a stick or two at a time and the health warnings on the
cigarette packs will bypass them. Thus there will be no regular reminder
that they are inviting illness by lighting up. That is why it is
essential that all cigarette sellers, under pain of a stiff fine for
non-compliance, should be made to display large pictorially explicit
posters warning about the dangers of smoking at the point of sale. We
hope the Minister of Health will quickly get moving on this matter.
Quite apart from that, beedis that are widely smoked in this country
and, unlike cigarettes are barely taxed, are a forgotten factor in this
debate. Obviously they are as dangerous to health as cigarettes and
continue to be the low price alternative for smokers. A recent report by
Nielsen, the world’s largest market research organization, said that
that 2.88 billion beedi sticks and been sold here in 2012 against 4.31
billion cigarettes. Beedi now commands a 42% share of the tobacco market
and there is hardly a peep about that danger and the harm it is doing
to those who indulge in them! Added to that, the beedi industry hardly
pays any taxes. There is a nominal customs duty on tendu leaf in which
beedis are wrapped and that is about the whole story. According to
available data, the range of tax incidence on a bundle of beedis is 8 to
10 percent against 60 to 80 percent on each packet of cigarettes. Total
government levies on beedis runs at less than half a billion rupees per
year. While theoretically VAT and the Nation Building Levy are also
payable, whether this is in fact paid is anybody’s guess.
We do not have to labour the point that the Ceylon Tobacco Company PLC.,
the country’s monopoly legal cigarette manufacturer which last year
paid Rs. 76.5 billion taxes to the government is a cash cow that has
long been milked by the government. Excise duty on tobacco had been
regularly increased in the annual budgets, or the gazettes which have
been seized by finance ministers to pretend that they have not imposed
hardship on consumers, to raise cigarette and liquor prices for as long
as anybody can remember. Crippling taxes on tobacco and alcohol that
prevail in this country today should no doubt be price sticks that beat
down smoking and drinking. While CTC has been seeing its sales volumes
falling in recent years, its profits have been rising. This could be
party attributed to leaner production processes with more automation and
a smaller factory workforce as well as industry price increases that
have often accompanied higher excise duties imposed by the government.
It is also likely that the growing beedi market is partly the result of
the ever-rising cigarette price forcing smokers to look for a cheaper
alternative. Similarly, drinkers too have resorted to kasippu, where no
taxes whatever are paid, when arrack has become too expensive for them.
We do not know whether a single beedi does more harm to a smoker than a
single cigarette. Obviously a beedi contains less tobacco than a
cigarette as a single stick is both slimmer and shorter. Price-wise a
beedi costs Rs. 2 against Rs. 28 for a Gold Leaf cigarette which by all
accounts is the most popular. It would be useful if the Ministry of
Health gets the tar and nicotine content of beedis analyzed and publish
this information. As far as cigarettes go, these would be known and the
information freely available. A Gold Leaf cigarette doubled in price
from Rs. 14 to Rs. 28 in the six years between 2008 and 2014 while price
of a single beedi went up only by 50 cents from Rs. 1.50 to Rs. 2
during this period. Naturally the focus is on the cigarette industry in
relation to the health issue as it is much more visible than the cheaper
alternative. But the fact remains that beedis, mostly smoked in the
countryside, are as dangerous as cigarettes and there is no good reason
for the anti-smoking propaganda and campaigns both of the government and
other agencies to exclude the cheaper product from their sights. It is
also necessary that this industry, which is legitimate unlike kasippu,
is not let off the tax hook.