| Literature DB >> 30135114 |
Allen W A Gallagher1, Karen A Evans-Reeves1, Jenny L Hatchard1, Anna B Gilmore1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the quality of tobacco industry-funded data on the illicit tobacco trade (ITT) through a systematic review of existing assessments of industry-funded data on ITT. DATA SOURCES: Papers and reports assessing tobacco industry-funded data on ITT were obtained via searches of 8 academic databases, Google searches and correspondence with ITT experts. STUDY SELECTION: Inclusion criteria identified 35 English-language papers containing an original assessment of tobacco industry-funded data. DATA EXTRACTION: Using a coding framework, information was extracted from the assessments regarding the quality of tobacco industry data. Documents were second-coded, achieving 94% intercoder reliability with all disagreements resolved. DATA SYNTHESIS: Of the 35 assessments reviewed, 31 argued that tobacco industry estimates were higher than independent estimates. Criticisms identified problems with data collection (29), analytical methods (22) and presentation of results (21), which resulted in inflated ITT estimates or data on ITT that were presented in a misleading manner. Lack of transparency from data collection right through to presentation of findings was a key issue with insufficient information to allow replication of the findings frequently cited.Entities:
Keywords: illegal tobacco products; public policy; tobacco industry
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30135114 PMCID: PMC6580768 DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2018-054295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Control ISSN: 0964-4563 Impact factor: 7.552
Figure 1Study selection process—Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram. ITT, illicit tobacco trade.
Key categories of industry data (based on assessments) captured by coding framework
| Characteristics | Title/year/funder |
The organisation that produced the data, the title and year of report (if applicable) and the funder of the data. |
| Geographic information |
The region, country and locality of the data (each included when applicable). | |
| Data collection type (can select multiple) |
Survey (tobacco consumer). Survey (tobacco retailer). Empty Pack Surveys. Industry sales data. Seizure data. Expert input. Export and import/international trade statistics. | |
| Analytical method used (can select multiple) |
Quantitative analysis. Flows model. Tax gap. Econometric modelling. Qualitative analysis. Comparison of export and import statistics. | |
| Criticisms/praise | Criticisms made (with option to highlight praise) |
Estimates were substantially higher than comparable independent estimates. Criticism of data collection methodology. Criticisms of analysis. Poor presentation of results. Funding is a conflict of interest. Author/s do not take responsibility for findings. Not peer-reviewed. Research contributes nothing of value. Funding is not acknowledged. |
Data authors, funders and geography of assessed data
| Geography | Funder of assessed data | ||||||
| British American Tobacco (subsidiary* or spokesperson†) | Imperial Tobacco/Brands (subsidiary or spokesperson) | Japan Tobacco International (subsidiary or spokesperson) | Philip Morris International (subsidiary or spokesperson) | Other TTC | More than one TTC | Funded by an organisation that has TTC members | |
| Asia | Oxford Economics & International Tax & Investment Center | ||||||
| Australia | British American Tobacco (or subsidiary) | Imperial Tobacco/Brands (or subsidiary) | Australian Association of Convenience Stores | Alliance of Australian Retailer‡ | |||
| Bulgaria | KPMG | Bulgartabac | |||||
| Brazil | British American Tobacco (or subsidiary) | ||||||
| European Union | KPMG | ||||||
| Italy | Transcrime (Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore) | ||||||
| Malaysia | Confederation of Malaysian Tobacco Manufacturers | ||||||
| New Zealand | British American Tobacco (or subsidiary) | Imperial Tobacco/Brands (or subsidiary) | |||||
| Poland | ALMARES Institute for Consulting and Market Research | ALMARES Institute for Consulting and Market Research | Poland’s National Association for the Tobacco Industry | ||||
| South Africa | British American Tobacco (or subsidiary) | Tobacco Institute of South Africa | |||||
| UK | British American Tobacco (or subsidiary) | Imperial Tobacco/Brands (or subsidiary) | Japan Tobacco International (or subsidiary) | Philip Morris International (or subsidiary) | Tobacco Manufacturers Association | ||
| USA | Mackinac Center for Public Policy§ | ||||||
Grey=author.
*Subsidiary refers to a company that is controlled by a TTC but operates, usually in a different region and under a different name, eg, British American Tobacco South Africa and Souza Cruz are subsidiaries of British American Tobacco.
†Spokesperson refers to an individual who is employed by and is speaking on behalf of a TTC.
‡The Alliance of Australian Retailers is a TTC front group, funded by Philip Morris, Imperial Tobacco and British American Tobacco,110 so the funders of these data are listed as ‘more than one TTC’.
§The Mackinac Center for Public Policy was on Altria’s 2017 list of charitable donations and has received funding from Philip Morris dating back to the 1990s.111 112
TTC, transnational tobacco company.
Figure 2Identified data collection methodologies, analytical methods and criticisms. *Total percentages add up to >100% due to more than one methodology being identified.
List of coded criticisms and definitions
| Criticism | Examples | Assessments identified in |
| Estimates were substantially higher than comparable independent estimates |
Results are compared with independent estimates and found to suggest higher levels of ITT. |
|
| Criticism of collection methodology |
Data collection method is inappropriate/unsuitable including: data collection process requires later manufacturer involvement to identify counterfeits. Measurements are defined incorrectly and/or different types of duty-not-paid products are not distinguished between during the data collection process. Data collection process does not lead to a representative sample, meaning results are not generalisable. Data collection process is not transparent. |
|
| Criticism of analytical method |
Analytical method is inappropriate/unsuitable including: Does not account for non-response rates or sampling error. Analysis contains errors or mistakes that may influence its estimates. There is insufficient cross-validation to support findings. Analysis process is not transparent. |
|
| Poor presentation of results |
Results are not presented adequately (eg, in a range or with CIs). Results are presented in a misleading manner. There are problems with study’s glossary/definitions. Methodological limitations are not discussed. Biased representation of existing literature. |
|
| Funding is a conflict of interest |
Tobacco industry funding represents a conflict of interest. |
|
| Author/s do not take responsibility for findings |
Authors openly distance themselves from the findings, eg, there is a disclaimer about using the results at your own risk. |
|
| Not peer-reviewed |
No reference to a peer-review process. |
|
| Research contributes nothing of value |
The research findings contribute nothing new or worthwhile to the pool of research on illicit trade. |
|
| Funding is not acknowledged |
No acknowledgement of funding sources. |
|
Coded data sources with descriptions & limitations
| Data source | Description | Limitations of approach | Assessments identified in |
| Survey (tobacco consumer) | Self-reported information on illicit tobacco consumption and/or related purchase behaviours is gathered from surveying tobacco consumers. Survey data may be collected in person, by mail, online or by phone. | Questionable validity due to potential under-reporting as a result of stigma associated with illicit behaviour. |
|
| Empty Pack Survey (EPS) | EPS measures non-domestic product through the collection of discarded cigarette packs and determination of their tax status. | Cannot distinguish between legal and illicit non-domestic product and cannot identify counterfeits without a lab test. |
|
| Sales data | Many countries, usually through government agencies, hold reliable statistics about tax-paid sales of tobacco products. | Reliable tax-paid sales data in certain countries may not be publicly available |
|
| Seizure data | Data on the amount of illicit tobacco product seized by a countries’ law enforcement/customs authorities. | Can overestimate counterfeit cigarettes. As TTCs (in many jurisdictions) determine the origin of a seized product, they may identify their own products as counterfeits in order to avoid the payment of penalties. |
|
| Expert input/opinion | Those with special insight into ITT, such as researchers and law enforcement officials, are a potential data source for information on ITT. They may be contacted for information, directly questioned, or their opinions may be presented to support a conclusion. | Opinions are subjective and open to bias due to individual experience, interests, media exposure, etc. |
|
| Export and import/international trade statistics | Where countries record the quantity of both imports and exports of tobacco products by country of destination, these data can be collected over time and compared with mirror image in the receiving/exporting country. | Trade data do not always match correctly within a given month or year, as imports/exports may not be marked as such immediately or soon after arrival. Measures for reporting imports/exports are volatile as monetary values are subject to changes in currency exchange and volume measurements may not be consistent over time (eg, may change from weight to number of cigarettes). |
|
| Survey (tobacco retailer) | Retailers may be questioned on their perceptions of issues including illicit tobacco use and availability. | Retailer surveys are not a legitimate measure of illicit tobacco trade as retailer’s perceptions of the availability of illicit tobacco are not indicative of levels of consumption and can be unreliable. Retailer surveys are also vulnerable to limitations applicable to consumer surveys. |
|
| Unclear | The assessment did not provide enough information to determine the data collection method/s used in the assessed data. | NA |
|
ITT, illicit tobacco trade; NA, not applicable; TTC, Transnational tobacco company.
Qualitative examples of criticisms related to transparency
| Associated critique | Example taken from an assessment |
| Data collection | "Despite internet searches and multiple attempts to contact the tobacco manufacturers and the research company, we do not have all details of the method used by the tobacco industry. For example, we lack information on how the sample paths and bins for the discarded pack collection were selected, what pack features were taken into account when deciding whether the pack is tax-paid or non-tax-paid. We only know that the packs were examined by the four respective producers to find counterfeit cigarettes". |
| Data analysis | ’There is limited information to explain how the model captures the various factors that influence consumption and insufficient information to independently replicate the report’s estimates. In addition, the model is applied inconsistently in each country'. |
| Presentation of results | ’Different sources and methods are used across countries, leading to results that are not comparable to one another, yet presented for comparison, without acknowledgement of their distinctions'. |
Coded analytical methods with descriptions & limitations
| Data analysis | Description | Limitations of approach | Assessments identified in |
| Quantitative (unspecified) | Analysis was identified as quantitative (unspecified) when assessments indicated that calculations had taken place but did not disclose the exact method used to produce them. | NA |
|
| Flows model | A method of analysis that can use multiple data sources to attempt to measure trade flows (the inflows and outflows of cigarettes) between multiple markets in order to estimate consumption. | There is currently no well-established effective flows model approach. KPMG’s ’EU Flows' model and the International Tax & Investment Center’s ’IT flows' model are examples of this approach, |
|
| Tax gap | A tax gap is the difference between the amount of tax that, in theory, should be collected and how much is actually collected. To measure this, an estimate of total tobacco consumption is produced, with legal consumption then being extracted, leaving the ‘gap’, that is, the illicit market. | Cannot determine whether illicit cigarettes are counterfeit or contraband ( |
|
| Econometric modelling | The use of a mathematical formula, using economic data, which considers the relationship between variables correlated with total consumption (eg, consumer income) and variables positively correlated with ITT (eg, proximity to a jurisdiction with lower price, the level of corruption, etc). | Requires high-quality (often nationally representative data) and experienced econometricians. |
|
| Qualitative analysis | Analysis of non-numerical information such as interviews or focus group outputs. This may involve content, narrative, discourse or framework analysis, as well as grounded theory and ethnographic approaches. | Findings cannot be generalised to larger populations and research quality is heavily dependent on the individual skills of the researcher and their agenda. |
|
| Comparison of export and import statistics | Comparison of reported tobacco exports destined for a country with that country’s reported tobacco imports. Persistent discrepancies between these amounts can indicate large-scale smuggling schemes. | Complicated by different countries reporting exports/imports differently (eg, in volume or monetary value) and the timing of the reporting. The trade classification system can also change over time. |
|
| Unclear | The assessment did not provide enough information to determine the data analytical method/s used in the assessed data. | NA |
|
ITT, illicit tobacco trade; NA, not applicable.