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What is
Smoke Free Suffolk?

Part of a national network of alliances partly funded by the Department of Health, the
Smoke Free Suffolk Alliance is a collaborative body comprising representatives of thirteen different local agencies pursuing a set of agreed goals for tobacco control in Suffolk.

Smoke Free Suffolk's main aims include reducing the prevalence and uptake of tobacco use, and thereby the incidence of smoking-related diseases.

Smoke Free Suffolk is involved in raising awareness of the dangers of smoking, participating in annual campaigns such as No Smoking Day and Cancer Prevention Week.

Smoke Free Suffolk meets regularly to exchange information and plan future tobacco control activities in Suffolk.

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Smuggled & Counterfeit Tobacco
The Scale of the Problem

Approximately one third of internationally traded cigarettes (355 billion per year) are eventually sold illegally with the avoidance of duty. This reduces the price, increases demand, undermines national tobacco tax policies and, as a result, harms health by increasing tobacco use. By the late 1990s, cigarette smuggling in the UK had reached epidemic proportions: according to tobacco industry estimates, 25%-30% of the total market was made up of illegally imported cigarettes although Customs & Excise estimated the figure to be no more than 21%. Tobacco smuggling was costing the Government more than £3 billion a year in lost revenue. Action by HM Revenue & Customs (formerly Customs & Excise) since 2000 has helped reduce the proportion of smuggled cigarettes to approx 16% of the UK market. Despite this success, 1 in 6 cigarettes and about half of hand-rolling tobacco smoked in Britain are still illicit resulting in a net loss to the Government of more than £2 billion a year.

Who Benefits?

Organised crime and petty criminals clearly benefit. The tobacco companies benefit because average tobacco prices are reduced and hence demand increased and cheap smuggled cigarettes may keep people smoking who otherwise would quit. High levels of smuggling can also result in governments reducing tobacco taxes in an effort to deal with the problem. This keeps prices lower and demand higher in the legal market – again the tobacco companies benefit. The World Bank has identified price as a key health and economic policy in tobacco control, and smuggling undermines the effectiveness of this policy.

The “White van trade” Is Not The Main Problem

The trade in contraband cigarettes is dominated by large-scale container fraud: as many as 10 million cigarettes can be hidden in containers which are disguised to give the appearance of carrying legitimate products such as food or furniture. This is very different from the popular perception of cigarette smuggling, namely the “white van trade” in which small scale operators exploit cross-Channel tax differentials but pay duty in, say, Belgium or France. Cigarettes obtained legally in lower-taxed countries and consumed in the UK account for about 9% of the total cigarette market. However, hand-rolling tobacco makes up a significant proportion of tobacco imported illegally into the UK from mainland Europe: in 2004-05 illicit market share was estimated to be 53%-64% of the total market.

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  • Illegal Tobacco
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