Recent evidence on the illicit cigarette trade in Latin America
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Rev Panam Salud Publica
Abstract
The tobacco industry continues to present the illicit trade of tobacco products as a reason to slow, stop, or
reverse tobacco control efforts in Latin America, including increasing tobacco excise taxes. In most cases,
industry estimates of illicit trade, usually non-transparent and flawed, dwarf those of independent, rigorous
research. Often, independent studies find that the levels of illicit trade are mostly non-consequential or eas ily manageable (<12%). Almost always, industry findings grossly overestimate the illicit market. Fortunately,
a burgeoning empirical literature in the region—including Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and
Uruguay—is illuminating the genuine levels and nature of this trade, typically employing gap analysis that
compares tax-paid sales to consumption and/or pack inspection studies using packs shown by smokers in
surveys or discarded in the streets or garbage. Additional research in countries including Brazil, Colombia,
Ecuador, and Paraguay examines supply chains to help identify the illicit sources. This research is already
helping governments to address any real problems with illicit trade and to reassure stakeholders that tobacco
control efforts should be strengthened, not diminished.
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Keywords
Comercialização de Produtos Derivados do Tabaco, Tobacco-Derived Products Commerce, Comercialización de Productos Derivados del Tabaco, Tributação de Produtos Derivados do Tabaco, Taxation of the Tobacco-Derived Products, Tributación de los Productos Derivados del Tabaco, Indústria do Tabaco, Tobacco Industry, Industria del Tabaco, América Latina, Latin America