Tag: Minister Paschal Donohoe TD

  • Retailers warn cost-of-living crisis is not the right time for further excise increases

    Retailers warn cost-of-living crisis is not the right time for further excise increases

    Widening the gap between price of duty paid tobacco vs what’s available on the black market coupled with cost-of-living is creating unfair competition and financial loss for legitimate retailers

    Any additional excise increases on tobacco products in Budget 2023 will drive hard-pressed consumers to the black market as they grapple with the soaring cost-of-living. That’s according to Retailers Against Smuggling (RAS), who have outlined how Ireland remains a key target for crime gangs taking advantage of a rapidly growing illicit tobacco market.

    Commenting on the organisation’s Budget submission to Minister Paschal Donohoe TD, RAS national spokesperson, Benny Gilsenan explained how further excise increases would directly impact both the retail sector and Exchequer.

    He said: “RAS members are witnessing first-hand how the skyrocketing cost-of-living is forcing Irish consumers to make radical decisions on how and where they spend hard-earned income. For many, the black market has for the first time become the only realistic option for purchasing high excise items such as alcohol, solid fuel, and tobacco products.

    “Year-on-year excise increases on tobacco products in particular have resulted in them becoming an exceptionally lucrative commodity for organised crime gangs. A record year for cigarette and tobacco seizures by Revenue in 2021 shows the extent to which sophisticated criminals are taking advantage of household cost-of-living pressures and rapidly growing demand for the black market in Ireland. A trend which RAS members have seen continue to escalate throughout 2022 as the crisis deepens.”

    Mr Gilsenan added: “In the context of spiralling costs and a challenging operational environment ahead, Budget 2023 must avoid any measures which will negatively impact key revenue streams for retailers including an excise hike on tobacco products.”

    Enforcement of tobacco allowances for travellers coming into Ireland

    RAS has also called on Government to ensure ports and airports are adequately resourced to fully enforce the permitted personal allowances that can be brought into Ireland on non-Irish duty paid products. In 2021, 21% of all cigarette packs and 18% of all roll-your-own tobacco packs held by smokers in Ireland were found to be classified as illegal or non-Irish duty paid according to Revenue’s Tobacco Products Research Survey.

    Mr Gilsenan continued: “A full return to international travel this year and the reintroduction of duty-free shopping between the UK and the EU following the end of the Brexit transition period are also having a significant impact on Irish retail tobacco sales. With Ireland ranked as the most expensive country in Europe to purchase duty paid tobacco, consumers are understandably taking advantage of the option to purchase cheaper product outside the State while travelling and bringing it back.

    “To protect key revenue streams for both retailers and the Exchequer, it is critical that ports and airports are adequately resourced to ensure the permittable allowances set out by Customs for bringing non-Irish duty paid products into the country are fully enforced. Retailers are concerned that these allowances are being exceeded with individuals bringing in much larger quantities than what is permitted for personal consumption or to pass on to friends and family.”

    Download the RAS Pre-Budget Submission 2023 here.

  • Retailers Against Smuggling welcomes cigarette seizure at Rosslare Europort

    Retailers Against Smuggling welcomes cigarette seizure at Rosslare Europort

    Retailers Against Smuggling (RAS) has welcomed Tuesday’s seizure by Revenue of 3,300,000 million cigarettes at Rosslare Europort with an estimated retail value of €2,400,000 representing a potential loss to the exchequer of €1,900,000. This brings the total quantity of seized illicit cigarettes reported by Revenue to over 40,000,000 so far this year pointing to a rapidly growing black market in Ireland.

    Considering this latest major seizure, retailers are reiterating their call to Minister for Finance Paschal Donohoe TD not to include a further excise increase on tobacco products in next week’s Budget 2022 announcement. Additional excise increases will only serve to further incentivise consumers to purchase from the black market fuelling further growth in smuggling activity, which continues to impact registered and legitimate tobacco retailers whose legal cigarette trade can account for 20 – 30 per cent of their business.

    RAS commends the ongoing work by Revenue officials in the fight against smuggling, particularly at our major points of entry through ports and airports.

  • Excise increases on tobacco will push consumers to growing black market, retailers warn

    Excise increases on tobacco will push consumers to growing black market, retailers warn

    Attachment orders required to make deterrents to smuggle tobacco more robust

    Continuous excise increases on tobacco are driving Irish smokers towards a growing black market, fuelling significant growth in smuggling activity. That is according to Retailers Against Smuggling (RAS), who have outlined why Budget 2022 should not increase excise on tobacco products considering the unfair ‘competition’ legitimate retailers face from criminal gangs exploiting the demand for illegal tobacco products.

    Commenting on the organisation’s Budget submission to Minister for Finance, Paschal Donohoe TD, national spokesperson for RAS, Benny Gilsenan said: “An excise increase on tobacco products in Budget 2022 will only serve to further damage an already weakened retail sector and will provide increased opportunity for large-scale smuggling and ant smuggling of tobacco products.

    “The policy informing Budget 2022 must account for the need to create a sustainable, flourishing, and legitimate retail sector as we emerge from the pandemic. As retailers, we continue to compete with a very active black market in tobacco products which accounts for 15% of all cigarette packs in Ireland not to mention the 9% of cigarette packs smoked which are bought in from other jurisdictions.”

    Retailers concern around return of ant smuggling

    Mr Gilsenan added: “There is genuine concern amongst retailers that increased demand for the black market spurred by excise increases will lead to an accelerated return of ant smuggling as international travel resumes. Ant smuggling is typically carried out by smugglers travelling on low-cost airlines to purchase cigarettes in countries where it can cost as little as €2 for a pack of 20 cigarettes.

    “Ant smugglers are bringing tobacco products back into Ireland for sale on the streets for less than half of the Irish retail price, making it impossible for legitimate retailers like myself to compete. We have already witnessed eight significant tobacco seizures by Revenue at our airports so far this year and any increase in excise duty in Budget 2022 will only push more of the public to take advantage of this illegal option that bypasses the local shopkeeper and damages revenues to the State.”

    Attachment orders required to make smuggling deterrents more robust

    Only 55 cases of illicit tobacco trade resulted in prosecution throughout 2020 which is in direct contrast to the high volume of illicit cigarettes and tobacco seized by Revenue over the same period valued at over €37m. The scale of the problem was further emphasised last week with three major tobacco seizures by Revenue at Dublin Port valued in excess of €11.1m.

    Mr Gilsenan concluded: “The lack of prosecutions versus the volume of illicit cigarettes, indicates that the deterrents for the sophisticated criminal gangs and small-time criminals behind the black market are ineffective, with potential profits outweighing any penalties that might be imposed. Budget 2022, in the context of excisable goods, should focus on rendering existing enforcement regulations more robust by introducing attachment orders to violations, thereby providing the means to the State to recoup losses to the Exchequer driven by smuggling. Recent large-scale cigarette and tobacco seizures in the summer of 2021 point to criminals getting ready to compete aggressively with legal retailers in Ireland. Let’s not give them that opportunity.”

    Download the Retailers Against Smuggling Pre-Budget 2022 Submission here