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Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body
Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body

The Herald

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • The Herald

Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body

'The bill also draws an unfair distinction between the formal and informal sectors. The informal sector is not held to the same compliance standards and that imbalance is not fair. We ask that this gap be closed by ensuring that all businesses, formal or informal, are required to hold the necessary licences, registrations and compliance documentation.' CGCSA proposed that separate consultative legislative processes should continue. 'Illicit trade in tobacco has increased by between 60% and 70%, and we are demanding urgent prioritisation of this issue, because what we are witnessing is a full-blown crisis,' Tyikwe said. She said the value chain faced mounting pressure from the bill. 'While it aims to improve public health outcomes through stronger tobacco control, it also carries implications for the entire tobacco and nicotine value chain. The total farming yields have declined, worsened by the 2020 lockdown, which reduced employment from 11,000 to 6,000 workers, who are supporting at least 80,000 dependents. 'These farmers contributing to the national fiscal without government aid exemplifies the value chain's fragility. Retailers must also reconfigure points-of-sales at significant costs to conceal products, while specialists, tobacconists and vaping stores face customer loss. Informal traders, such as spaza shops, lack the infrastructure to comply, facing criminalisation and exclusion from legal trade.' CGCSA legal, regulatory and sustainability executive Neo Momodu said the statement constantly being made was that business wanted to make a profit.

Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body
Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body

TimesLIVE

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • TimesLIVE

Proposed smoking regulations ignore 'illicit trade crisis', says consumer body

South Africa's proposed smoking regulations ignore the country's 'illicit trade crisis', the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa (CGCSA) said on Tuesday. In its parliamentary submission to the portfolio committee on health, CGCSA said the Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill was a 'plug-and-play' import of foreign models that completely disregard the illegal production, smuggling, distribution and sale of tobacco products in the country. It said while the council, which represents more than 9,000 South African companies, supported evidence-based tobacco control to advance public health, it was concerned about the 'unintended consequences, particularly economic harm and the likely expansion of the illicit tobacco trade, which is estimated to cost South Africa at least R18bn per annum'. CGCSA CEO Zinhle Tyikwe said the bill adopted a one-size-fits-all approach which did not account for South Africa's unique context. An illicit tobacco market now accounted for an estimated 60—70% of sales. 'We are seeing shortcomings in the bill, particularly where there is a 'plug-and-play' from other foreign models that may be similar to South Africa but are not South African. Here we are in the middle of an illicit trade crisis, not just in tobacco but also in pharmaceuticals, fraud and liquor. As an industry, we deal with issues that are critical, because if people consume alcohol, food or pharmaceutical medicines that are illicit, there is a real risk that people will die. We take our work seriously,' said Tyikwe

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