Zürcher Nachrichten - Australian black market tobacco sparks firebombings, budget hole

EUR -
AED 4.03207
AFN 79.662752
ALL 98.578261
AMD 431.058815
ANG 1.965221
AOA 1006.094455
ARS 1186.719331
AUD 1.782499
AWG 1.97597
AZN 1.865165
BAM 1.954431
BBD 2.22606
BDT 133.953737
BGN 1.961271
BHD 0.4126
BIF 3277.414897
BMD 1.097761
BND 1.484919
BOB 7.618664
BRL 6.387926
BSD 1.102478
BTN 95.706248
BWP 15.63969
BYN 3.608107
BYR 21516.117878
BZD 2.214668
CAD 1.54691
CDF 3156.063695
CHF 0.93594
CLF 0.028078
CLP 1077.485867
CNY 8.068599
CNH 8.078441
COP 4722.842762
CRC 567.087308
CUC 1.097761
CUP 29.09067
CVE 110.177794
CZK 25.055854
DJF 196.323551
DKK 7.466098
DOP 68.620062
DZD 146.26489
EGP 56.560824
ERN 16.466417
ETB 145.828546
FJD 2.544719
FKP 0.859954
GBP 0.854805
GEL 3.024353
GGP 0.859954
GHS 17.007053
GIP 0.859954
GMD 79.19215
GNF 9506.505488
GTQ 8.471149
GYD 229.413908
HKD 8.521431
HNL 28.281083
HRK 7.540306
HTG 144.42208
HUF 410.12674
IDR 18611.682166
ILS 4.103426
IMP 0.859954
INR 94.699638
IQD 1438.565137
IRR 46241.501287
ISK 145.792995
JEP 0.859954
JMD 173.330771
JOD 0.778331
JPY 161.147986
KES 142.17253
KGS 95.313351
KHR 4395.094428
KMF 494.995267
KPW 987.991249
KRW 1624.696428
KWD 0.338152
KYD 0.910304
KZT 569.147514
LAK 23780.220338
LBP 98975.841954
LKR 326.236126
LRD 219.605659
LSL 21.50249
LTL 3.241403
LVL 0.664025
LYD 5.428208
MAD 10.495466
MDL 19.472794
MGA 5141.238654
MKD 61.729669
MMK 2304.758479
MNT 3857.795481
MOP 8.786288
MRU 43.636402
MUR 49.524126
MVR 16.953477
MWK 1904.196605
MXN 22.295594
MYR 4.930182
MZN 70.066633
NAD 21.50249
NGN 1720.905944
NIO 40.417969
NOK 11.859799
NPR 151.590446
NZD 1.936121
OMR 0.422632
PAB 1.097761
PEN 4.097759
PGK 4.518188
PHP 63.060778
PKR 308.147636
PLN 4.297658
PYG 8816.318668
QAR 3.995705
RON 5.007755
RSD 117.895319
RUB 94.327373
RWF 1571.697595
SAR 4.116608
SBD 9.330731
SCR 16.059552
SDG 658.866986
SEK 10.950815
SGD 1.485183
SHP 0.862668
SLE 24.984866
SLL 23019.502915
SOS 626.717826
SRD 40.213227
STD 22721.438735
SVC 9.604981
SYP 14273.01392
SZL 21.50249
THB 38.252355
TJS 11.915134
TMT 3.840032
TND 3.383766
TOP 2.656176
TRY 41.714017
TTD 7.448427
TWD 36.221613
TZS 2938.832958
UAH 45.292413
UGX 4054.308625
USD 1.097761
UYU 47.076198
UZS 14228.321659
VES 80.410918
VND 28542.305444
VUV 138.333853
WST 3.164562
XAF 659.993689
XAG 0.035247
XAU 0.000352
XCD 2.97112
XDR 0.822847
XOF 659.993689
XPF 119.331742
YER 269.746864
ZAR 21.178287
ZMK 9881.170861
ZMW 30.78375
ZWL 353.478632
  • JRI

    0.5200

    11.99

    +4.34%

  • CMSC

    0.3900

    22.6

    +1.73%

  • RBGPF

    60.2700

    60.27

    +100%

  • BCC

    8.5100

    98.44

    +8.64%

  • NGG

    2.4700

    65.21

    +3.79%

  • SCS

    0.8700

    10.61

    +8.2%

  • RELX

    3.2300

    48.54

    +6.65%

  • BCE

    0.1300

    21

    +0.62%

  • GSK

    0.3500

    34.48

    +1.02%

  • RIO

    3.2900

    55.61

    +5.92%

  • AZN

    1.8600

    66.76

    +2.79%

  • VOD

    0.3900

    8.58

    +4.55%

  • BTI

    0.6600

    40.21

    +1.64%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    9.3

    +1.08%

  • CMSD

    0.3700

    22.75

    +1.63%

  • BP

    1.7900

    27.9

    +6.42%

Australian black market tobacco sparks firebombings, budget hole
Australian black market tobacco sparks firebombings, budget hole / Photo: DAVID GRAY - AFP

Australian black market tobacco sparks firebombings, budget hole

Sky-high tobacco prices in Australia have created a lucrative black market, analysts say, sparking a violent "tobacco war" and syphoning away billions in potential tax revenue.

Text size:

Faced with a pack of 25 cigarettes costing up to Aus$50 (US$32) or more -- including Aus$1.40 in tax on each stick -- many smokers have instead turned to readily available illicit tobacco.

At the same time, authorities have cracked down on vapes, restricting legal sales to pharmacies and opening up another illegal market for people in search of affordable nicotine.

In March, the government cut its budget forecast for tobacco tax revenue in the period to 2029 by Aus$6.9 billion.

"We've got a challenge here and too many people are avoiding the excise," Treasurer Jim Chalmers conceded after revealing the figures.

He announced an extra Aus$157 million for a multi-agency force battling organised crime groups involved in the market and a string of "tobacco war" fire-bombings.

The situation was a "total disaster", said James Martin, criminology course director at Deakin University in Melbourne.

"We have taken a public health issue, smoking, and our tobacco control policies have transformed it into a multi-fronted crisis," he told AFP.

"It is a fiscal crisis, so we are losing billions and billions of dollars in tobacco tax excise but also, more concerning for me as a criminologist, it has turned into a major crime problem."

Since the start of 2023, there had been more than 220 arson attacks targeting either black-market retailers or store owners who refuse to stock illicit tobacco products, Martin said.

- Extortion and intimidation -

"This is really serious organised crime, extortion and intimidation of otherwise law-abiding citizens."

Alleged crime figures named in local media as big players include convicted heroin trafficker Kazem Hamad, who was deported to Iraq in 2023, and an infamous Melbourne crime family.

Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission chief Heather Cook said criminals fighting over the "lucrative" illegal market were associated with "violence and dangerous behaviour".

"This is impacting communities," she told Melbourne's Herald Sun in February.

Law enforcement alone could not solve the problem, Martin said.

"If we just keep making nicotine harder to get to, people are going to turn to the black market."

Australia had made two mistakes, he said: pricing legal cigarettes so high that a pack-a-day habit cost about Aus$15,000 a year and at the same time heavily restricting sales of vapes, which were predominantly sold on the black market.

"The government needs to lower the tobacco tax excise to stop the bleed to the black market, and they need to legalise consumer vaping products."

New Zealand was the only country that had successfully introduced a similar tobacco taxation policy to Australia's, Martin said.

"But they did it by legalising vaping back in 2020," he added.

"So, New Zealand used to have a higher smoking rate than we did back just four years ago. It's now substantially lower than Australia's."

Illicit cigarettes are flowing into Australia from China and the Middle East, with vapes predominantly being sourced from Shenzhen in China, the criminologist said.

- 'War on nicotine' -

And the black market still thrives despite the Australian Border Force saying it detected huge volumes of illicit tobacco in the year to June 30, 2024 -- 1.8 billion cigarettes and more than 436 tonnes of loose leaf tobacco.

Daily tobacco smoking in Australia has fallen sharply over the past decades: from 24 percent of those aged over 14 in 1991 to 8.3 percent by 2023, according to a national household survey.

But monitoring of nicotine in Australian wastewater -- whether from cigarettes, vapes, or nicotine replacement products -- showed consumption per person had remained "relatively stable" since 2016, according to the government's health and welfare institute.

Edward Jegasothy, senior lecturer in public health at the University of Sydney, said smoking rates in Australia fell just as fast during periods of sharp price increases as they did when prices were stable.

The black market had undermined government policy by providing a cheaper alternative, he told AFP.

To address the problem, authorities would probably need to lower taxes on tobacco and strengthen law enforcement, he said.

Broader nicotine restrictions in Australia had left people with fewer less harmful alternatives to tobacco, Jegasothy said.

People switching to vapes were going to the unregulated market where concentrations of nicotine and other adulterants were unknown, he said.

"So that's another risk that's unnecessarily there because of the black market."

The high tobacco tax policy also hit people in the lowest socioeconomic groups the hardest, Jegasothy said, both because they were spending a higher proportion of their incomes on it, and because they had higher rates of smoking.

Australia's "disproportionate" focus on cutting nicotine supply rather than reducing demand and harm echoed the "War on Drugs", Jegasothy argued in a joint paper with Deakin University's Martin.

"As with Australia's broader War on Drugs, there is little evidence to suggest that our de facto War on Nicotine is an optimal strategy for reducing nicotine-related harms," it warns.

D.Graf--NZN