Vutivi
  • Business
    Ballerina turns ballet dance into a township business

    Kasi ballet mixes passion and business

    Lenhlogonolo Zonke, small Spaza Shop owner. Photo: Supplied

    Township traders say formalisation process is inaccessible

    MEC for the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environmental Affairs Khethiwe Moeketsi

    Finance facility to bolster access for Mpumalanga farmers

    Gogo Skhotheni, also known as Patricia Tumi Motsoeneng

    Celebrities use their influence to build successful businesses

    Black woman-led airline aims to reshape air travel

    Black woman-led NeoHeights set to reshape African air travel

    Township Entrepreneurs Alliance in partnership with Nedbank hosted a Kasi business workshop. Photo supplied by TEA

    Beyond funding experts urge holistic support for black businesses

    Award-winning farmer to expand her business

    SMMEs and business forums voiced urgent needs at the MEC’s Colloquium in North West

    SMEs push for funding access at colloquium

    College incubator produces 99 businesses, empowers entrepreneurs

    Small solar installers feel left

    Township installers shut out of multi-billion rand green economy

  • Agriculture
    MEC for Department of Agriculture and Rural Development in North West :Madoda Sambatha

    Livestock SMEs want access to retailers

    Lebohang Dhludhlu who runs a poultry farm

    Woman farmer making a mark in tough poultry sector

    Award-winning farmer to expand her business

    Mdu Lepele, an an agro-processor and entrepreneur in the cannabis industry. Photo supplied

    Policy shift opens cannabis opportunities

    MEC of North West Agriculture and Rural Development, Madoda Sambatha

    Youth agriculture drive aims to empower rural SMEs

    Small-scale sugarcane farmers are facing  uncertainty

    Sugarcane farmers struggling with rising cheap imports

    New smart farming app set to boost small scale farmers

    New regulations governing raw milk sales to affect small scale farmers

    New regulations on raw milk threaten small scale dairy farmers

  • Innovation
    Rich Tshepo helps SMMEs break into e-commerce

    E-commerce guru “Rich Tshepo” shares secrets

    Mulilo Renewable Energy LTD proves that there's energy market in South Africa.

    Mulilo is powering South Africa’s energy revolution

    The founder and CEO of Q4ME Vuledzani Mathavha

    Q4ME turns the hassle of queuing into a business opportunity

    Business analyst James Mavundla who launched Agrowex

    Agrowex App bridges farmer market gap

    Coin powered connectivity delivers easy profits for small businesses

    Portable power station by Vincent Mosebe

    Innovator develops portable station to power up SMEs

    Lillian Barnard, president for Microsoft Africa. Picture: Microsoft

    Empowering SMMEs through AI: Microsoft’s new vision

    AI-driven disinformation becoming a threat

    How businesses can fight back against cybercrime

    Owen Lekala

    Innovative transport app set to expand

    Online marketing platform made for SMMEs

  • Finance
    MEC Lebohang Maile during his budget vote at Gauteng Legislature

    Gauteng’s budget offers strategic investment in SMEs

    South African National Parks, in partnership with Sanlam, offers an interest-free loan program at Table Mountain in Cape Town. Photo: Facebook.

    More businesses to benefit from SANParks loan deal

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana

    R402 billion budget could open doors for construction SMEs

    Small Business Finance Development Agency has helped an entrepreneur to secure funding to invest in a filling station. Pic: Shell

    Franchise funding for entrepreneurs

    SMEs happy with Limpopo budget

    Limpopo Budget: hope for small businesses

    GEP deputy chairperson Phosane Mngqibisa

    Gauteng increases support for small businesses to access funds

    Heineken is investing in a malting plant

    Heineken’s R1.9bn investment set to boost local barley farmers

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana. Picture: GCIS

    Value Added Tax hike has SMMEs worried

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana to deliver revised budget

    Revised Budget 2025: What SMMEs Expect

    From left to right: Zoya Sisulu (Standard Bank Head, Client Coverage & Financial Institutions), Leila Mokaddem (AfDB Southern Africa Director General), Kenny Fihla (Standard Bank Group Deputy CE & SA CE), and Ahmed Attout (AfDB Financial Sector Development Director).
Picture: Supplied

    Billions set aside to finance small businesses

  • Tourism

    Creativity and collaboration key to coastal SMME survival

    Premier Panyaza Lesufi

    New initiative offers hope for SMMEs, fairer contracts

    Economic development, environment, conservation and tourism MEC Bitsa Lenkopane

    SMEs sceptical despite promise of R71 million for tourism

    G20 Tourism Hackathon

    Tourism enterprises call on hackathon to help bridge digital divide

    The Unveiling of the Kgodumodumo Dinosaur Interpretation Centre in the Free State

    Kgodumodumo Centre boosts tourism and empowers SMMEs

    Tourism companies eye opportunities in digital visa surge

    Astrotourism is emerging as a promising niche for the sector

    Space-related tourism offers economic lift-off for entrepreneurs

    Borutho Tours and travel is ready to give tourists a taste of Limpopo hospitality.

    Tourism campaign targets visitors to ignite economic growth

    Gen Zs attended tourism indaba in numbers

    Gen Z takes the lead on SA Tourism

  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Vutivi
  • Business
    Ballerina turns ballet dance into a township business

    Kasi ballet mixes passion and business

    Lenhlogonolo Zonke, small Spaza Shop owner. Photo: Supplied

    Township traders say formalisation process is inaccessible

    MEC for the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environmental Affairs Khethiwe Moeketsi

    Finance facility to bolster access for Mpumalanga farmers

    Gogo Skhotheni, also known as Patricia Tumi Motsoeneng

    Celebrities use their influence to build successful businesses

    Black woman-led airline aims to reshape air travel

    Black woman-led NeoHeights set to reshape African air travel

    Township Entrepreneurs Alliance in partnership with Nedbank hosted a Kasi business workshop. Photo supplied by TEA

    Beyond funding experts urge holistic support for black businesses

    Award-winning farmer to expand her business

    SMMEs and business forums voiced urgent needs at the MEC’s Colloquium in North West

    SMEs push for funding access at colloquium

    College incubator produces 99 businesses, empowers entrepreneurs

    Small solar installers feel left

    Township installers shut out of multi-billion rand green economy

  • Agriculture
    MEC for Department of Agriculture and Rural Development in North West :Madoda Sambatha

    Livestock SMEs want access to retailers

    Lebohang Dhludhlu who runs a poultry farm

    Woman farmer making a mark in tough poultry sector

    Award-winning farmer to expand her business

    Mdu Lepele, an an agro-processor and entrepreneur in the cannabis industry. Photo supplied

    Policy shift opens cannabis opportunities

    MEC of North West Agriculture and Rural Development, Madoda Sambatha

    Youth agriculture drive aims to empower rural SMEs

    Small-scale sugarcane farmers are facing  uncertainty

    Sugarcane farmers struggling with rising cheap imports

    New smart farming app set to boost small scale farmers

    New regulations governing raw milk sales to affect small scale farmers

    New regulations on raw milk threaten small scale dairy farmers

  • Innovation
    Rich Tshepo helps SMMEs break into e-commerce

    E-commerce guru “Rich Tshepo” shares secrets

    Mulilo Renewable Energy LTD proves that there's energy market in South Africa.

    Mulilo is powering South Africa’s energy revolution

    The founder and CEO of Q4ME Vuledzani Mathavha

    Q4ME turns the hassle of queuing into a business opportunity

    Business analyst James Mavundla who launched Agrowex

    Agrowex App bridges farmer market gap

    Coin powered connectivity delivers easy profits for small businesses

    Portable power station by Vincent Mosebe

    Innovator develops portable station to power up SMEs

    Lillian Barnard, president for Microsoft Africa. Picture: Microsoft

    Empowering SMMEs through AI: Microsoft’s new vision

    AI-driven disinformation becoming a threat

    How businesses can fight back against cybercrime

    Owen Lekala

    Innovative transport app set to expand

    Online marketing platform made for SMMEs

  • Finance
    MEC Lebohang Maile during his budget vote at Gauteng Legislature

    Gauteng’s budget offers strategic investment in SMEs

    South African National Parks, in partnership with Sanlam, offers an interest-free loan program at Table Mountain in Cape Town. Photo: Facebook.

    More businesses to benefit from SANParks loan deal

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana

    R402 billion budget could open doors for construction SMEs

    Small Business Finance Development Agency has helped an entrepreneur to secure funding to invest in a filling station. Pic: Shell

    Franchise funding for entrepreneurs

    SMEs happy with Limpopo budget

    Limpopo Budget: hope for small businesses

    GEP deputy chairperson Phosane Mngqibisa

    Gauteng increases support for small businesses to access funds

    Heineken is investing in a malting plant

    Heineken’s R1.9bn investment set to boost local barley farmers

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana. Picture: GCIS

    Value Added Tax hike has SMMEs worried

    Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana to deliver revised budget

    Revised Budget 2025: What SMMEs Expect

    From left to right: Zoya Sisulu (Standard Bank Head, Client Coverage & Financial Institutions), Leila Mokaddem (AfDB Southern Africa Director General), Kenny Fihla (Standard Bank Group Deputy CE & SA CE), and Ahmed Attout (AfDB Financial Sector Development Director).
Picture: Supplied

    Billions set aside to finance small businesses

  • Tourism

    Creativity and collaboration key to coastal SMME survival

    Premier Panyaza Lesufi

    New initiative offers hope for SMMEs, fairer contracts

    Economic development, environment, conservation and tourism MEC Bitsa Lenkopane

    SMEs sceptical despite promise of R71 million for tourism

    G20 Tourism Hackathon

    Tourism enterprises call on hackathon to help bridge digital divide

    The Unveiling of the Kgodumodumo Dinosaur Interpretation Centre in the Free State

    Kgodumodumo Centre boosts tourism and empowers SMMEs

    Tourism companies eye opportunities in digital visa surge

    Astrotourism is emerging as a promising niche for the sector

    Space-related tourism offers economic lift-off for entrepreneurs

    Borutho Tours and travel is ready to give tourists a taste of Limpopo hospitality.

    Tourism campaign targets visitors to ignite economic growth

    Gen Zs attended tourism indaba in numbers

    Gen Z takes the lead on SA Tourism

  • Advertise
No Result
View All Result
Vutivi
No Result
View All Result

Post Covid-19 world needs new approach to tobacco taxes

by Staff Reporter
October 29, 2020
in Business
Reading Time: 5 mins read
A A
A new approach is needed to deal with tobacco taxes, argues the author. Picture by Kilian Seiler/Unsplash

A new approach is needed to deal with tobacco taxes, argues the author. Picture by Kilian Seiler/Unsplash

Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare via Email

It is increasingly clear that the country needs a new post-Covid-19 approach to the tobacco industry and the growing illicit tobacco sector.
If drastic action is not taken soon, the more than 150 black tobacco farmers who are struggling to make a living in rural South Africa will soon go out of business. I’m in the tobacco industry myself and interact regularly with farmers and other processors. And it is no understatement to say that our lives have all been devastated by the economic consequences of the national pandemic, where the legal sale of cigarettes and other tobacco products was banned for almost five months.
We are not the only ones in the tobacco sector who have suffered. All the members of the sector’s value chain organisation, the South Africa Tobacco Transformation Alliance (SATTA) — who include the Black Tobacco Farmers Association, BAT South Africa, the Limpopo Tobacco Processors and Tobacco Producers Development — suffered tremendous losses because of their compliance with the law.
The same impact was felt by our extended value-chain partners, small traders and spaza shop owners, of whom the vast majority are black.
But perhaps the biggest loser of all from the Covid-19 pandemic was the national fiscus. As a result of the lockdown, it is estimated that excise revenues for the current fiscal year will fall by 32%, while R13.7 billion in excise revenue will be lost to the illicit market.
There can be absolutely no doubt who the biggest winners were, though: it was the shady characters who deal in illicit cigarettes. They were already making money hand over fist before Covid-19, but the lockdown was manna from heaven for them.
According to an independent study by the Research Unit on the Economics of Excisable Products at the University of Cape Town, the illicit trade – known as the duty not paid (DNP) trade — grew by an unprecedented 104% during the lockdown period.
In addition, a lot of illicit products currently sit in the market. And, since the ban, they have been selling cigarettes at pre-sales ban prices that clearly could not have paid excise duties.
What is more concerning is that the ban allowed the development of strong and sophisticated trans-border criminal networks of illicit players. The market has been almost completely taken over by criminal syndicates.
There are two obvious problems as we slowly emerge from the devastation of the COVID-19 pandemic:

  • Government needs to maximise its recovery of excise on legally-sold products; and
  • Government needs to find new ways to break the back of those behind illegally-sold products.

Clearly, a new approach to this situation is needed.
There are two ways for government to increase excise revenue from the sale of tobacco products.
Option one is to act in such a way that encourages increased legal sales volumes, which will increase the amount of revenue. This would mean keeping the price of tobacco products at an affordable level.
Option two is to increases the excise on tobacco products which, in our view, will decrease the amount of legal tobacco products being sold and consequently decrease the amount of revenue. It will also, we have no doubt, open up more and more space for illicit traders.
We believe that option one – not to increase excise on cigarettes, to keep the prices at current levels – is by far the best option.
At the same time, law enforcement agencies must directly tackle the illicit trade in cigarettes which has heavily impacted our value chain. It is no secret that SARS is currently struggling with capacity to arrest and bring those guilty of illicit trade to book.
To add teeth to government’s efforts, we are proposing that National Treasury adopts a new approach which has had significant success in other parts of the world.
It hinges on the establishment of a “minimum price level” (MPL) for cigarettes. This would enable law enforcement agencies (and consumers) to recognise illegal cigarettes purely by how cheap they are – which is the most obvious sign that excise duties are not being paid.
For example, if Treasury adopts an MPL price point of R28 for all retail sales of cigarettes, any cigarettes sold below this price would clearly not be “tax-compliant” given the amount that needs to be paid in excise. As a result, law enforcement agencies can enforce immediately based on a strong legal foundation and consumers would get certainty about the legality of their purchase.
An MPL strategy would need to be supported by a deterrent criminal penalty regime which includes heavy fines and jailtime for traders who contravene the law. This would allow law enforcement agencies to seize illicit cigarettes in the most efficient and effective way, based on in law.
There is a second, equally important step which can be taken: Government should urgently ratify the World Health Organisation Protocol on the elimination of illicit tobacco trade.
Government signed the protocol in 2013 but has yet to ratify it – leaving a large amount of space for illicit traders to continue with their underhand business.
We have asked Parliament for its support in ensuring that the loopholes are closed as quickly as possible by government ratifying the protocol, and finally putting an end to illicit trade.
At the same time, it will be breathing new life into South Africa’s tobacco value chain – and black farmers in particular – while also pumping funds into the country’s running-on-empty fiscus.

* Motsumi is spokesperson for the South Africa Tobacco Transformation Alliance

Tags: Black Tobacco FarmersCigarettes illegal marketsCigarettes pricingCovid-19 and cigarettes
Previous Post

Rooibos crop boosts cosmetic industry

Next Post

Indigenous Rooibos farmers tackle the odds

Staff Reporter

Staff Reporter

Related Posts

Ballerina turns ballet dance into a township business

Kasi ballet mixes passion and business

July 31, 2025
Lenhlogonolo Zonke, small Spaza Shop owner. Photo: Supplied

Township traders say formalisation process is inaccessible

July 31, 2025
MEC for the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environmental Affairs Khethiwe Moeketsi

Finance facility to bolster access for Mpumalanga farmers

July 31, 2025
Load More
Next Post
A smallholder farmer Barend Salomo is making inroads in farming Rooibos. Picture by: Mukurukuru Media.

Indigenous Rooibos farmers tackle the odds

President Cyril Ramaphosa who recently tabled an economic recovery plan for the country. Picture by Flickr

Mr President, more support is needed for small businesses to assist in economic growth

Dr Sam Motsuenyane who advocates for small business to be considered as a sector that can grow the economy

Wisdom from the father of black business

Information Inspiration Education | AnalysisSouth Africa's best news resource for micro-businesses and township entrepreneurs.
Follow Vutivi Business News on WhatsApp

FEATURED POST

Ballerina turns ballet dance into a township business

Kasi ballet mixes passion and business

July 31, 2025
Lenhlogonolo Zonke, small Spaza Shop owner. Photo: Supplied

Township traders say formalisation process is inaccessible

July 31, 2025
MEC for Department of Agriculture and Rural Development in North West :Madoda Sambatha

Livestock SMEs want access to retailers

July 31, 2025
MEC for the Department of Agriculture, Rural Development and Environmental Affairs Khethiwe Moeketsi

Finance facility to bolster access for Mpumalanga farmers

July 31, 2025

Vutivi is a digital business news platform that will serve the Small Medium Micro Enterprises in the form of writing stories that will be informative about their sector. We pledge to deliver a commercially sustainable, world-class digital financial and business news service that is a must-read while being responsive to readership needs and tailor-making packages for SMMEs.

Categories

  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Innovation
  • Top story
  • Tourism

Get in Touch

Email

news@vutivibusiness.co.za

© 2025 Vutivi. All rights reserved. Website by AIPX Atelier

Advertise / Privacy Policy / Contact

No Result
View All Result
  • Business
  • Agriculture
  • Innovation
  • Finance
  • Tourism
  • Advertise

© 2024 Vutivi // Website by AIPX Atelier.

We want to get to know you!
Take the Vuitivi Business News reader survey
AI generated image of Vutivi readers