| Literature DB >> 32989017 |
Jean Tesche1, Corne Van Walbeek2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In December 2017, the 15-member ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) and the 8-member WAEMU (West African Economic and Monetary Union, a subset of ECOWAS) passed new Tobacco Tax Directives. Both Directives increased the minimum ad valorem excise tax rate to 50%. In addition the ECOWAS Directive introduced a minimum specific tax (US$ 0.02/stick), but the WAEMU Directive did not. This paper examines the likely effects of these new Directives on cigarette prices, sales volumes and revenues.Entities:
Keywords: economics; low/middle income country; public policy; taxation
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32989017 PMCID: PMC8543226 DOI: 10.1136/tobaccocontrol-2020-055843
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tob Control ISSN: 0964-4563 Impact factor: 7.552
Figure 1Retail price, excise tax and total tax share of the price of the most sold brand of cigarettes, 2018. Source: WHO, Global Tobacco Control Report, 2019.
Tax rates for the base calculations
| Import duty (on imports from outside ECOWAS) | Specific excise per pack (local currency, US dollars) | Ad valorem excise rate | VAT rate | CIF or ex-factory value as percentage of retail price | |
| Benin | 20% | 40% | 18% | 10.6% | |
| Burkina Faso | 20% | 45% | 18% | 26.0% to 31.2% | |
| Cabo Verde | 37.9% | 30% | 15% | 27.9% to 61.8% | |
| Côte d'Ivoire | 20% | 33% | 21% | 30.3% | |
| Gambia | 20% | 20 (US$0.43) | 15% | 13.4% | |
| Ghana | 20% | 175% | 17.5% | 4.8% to 14.4% | |
| Guinea | 20% | 20% | 15% | 17.9% | |
| Guinea-Bissau | 20% | 45% | 17% | 24.2% | |
| Liberia | 5% | 80% | 10% | 23.0% | |
| Mali | 20% | 32% | 18% | 22.2% | |
| Niger | 20% | 50% | 19% | 25.1% | |
| Nigeria | 60% | 20 (US$0.06) | 20% | 5% | 8.8% to 22.0% |
| Senegal | 20% | 65% | 18% | 20.2% to 23.1% | |
| Sierra Leone | 35% | 35% | 15% | 9.3% | |
| Togo | 20% | 50% | 18% | 12.4% |
Ranges in the last column indicate the ex-factory or CIF shares for different price segments.
Sources: WHO GTCR 2019,8 Guinea: Word Bank,25 2017, Cabo Verde-excise: country engagement 2020.
CIF, costs, insurance and freight; ECOWAS, Economic Community of West African States; GTCR, Global Tobacco Control Report; VAT, value-added tax; WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Data sources and base year
| Import quantity and price: Comtrade | Total domestic supply | Price of the most sold brand: GTCR | |
| Benin | 2017 | Imports only | 2017 |
| Burkina Faso | 2017 | GTCR (excise revenue/ (excise revenue/pack) | 2017 |
| Cabo Verde | 2018 | SCT annual report | 2017 |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 2017 | GlobalData 2017 | 2017 |
| Gambia | 2017 | Imports only | 2017 |
| Ghana | 2018 | Imports only | 2018 |
| Guinea | 2015 | Imports only | 2014 |
| Guinea-Bissau | 2016 | Imports only | 2016 |
| Liberia | 2016 | Imports only | 2016 |
| Mali | 2017 | Imports only | 2018* |
| Niger | 2017 | Imports only | 2018* |
| Nigeria | 2018 | GlobalData, 2018 | Euromonitor |
| Senegal | 2017 | GlobalData, 2017 | 2018* |
| Sierra Leone | 2017 | Imports only | 2018* |
| Togo | 2017 | Imports only | 2018* |
Shaded countries are also members of WAEMU.
*Same price reported in 2016 and 2018, GTCR, 20198.
GTCR, Global Tobacco Control Report; SCT, Sociedade Caboverdiana de Tabacos; WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Simulation 1 results: cigarette excise taxes increased to ECOWAS minimums
| Retail sales price (RSP) | Sales volumes | Excise revenue | Total tax revenue | Excise % of RSP before tax increase | Excise % of RSP after tax increase | |
| Benin | 56% | −27% | 774% | 532% | 4% | 33% |
| Burkina Faso | 38% | −11% | 195% | 142% | 14% | 33% |
| Cabo Verde | 35% | −19% | 166% | 110% | 14% | 32% |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 48% | −24% | 177% | 125% | 15% | 37% |
| Gambia | 12% | −8% | 20% | 16% | 33% | 39% |
| Ghana | 42% | −22% | 133% | 74% | 17% | 36% |
| Guinea | 108% | −39% | 1243% | 474% | 4% | 46% |
| Guinea-Bissau | 57% | −27% | 248% | 142% | 13% | 39% |
| Liberia | 35% | −14% | 130% | 112% | 19% | 37% |
| Mali | 40% | −10% | 346% | 176% | 8% | 30% |
| Niger | 56% | −27% | 239% | 165% | 13% | 39% |
| Nigeria | 73% | −32% | 152% | 127% | 22% | 46% |
| Senegal | 53% | −26% | 129% | 68% | 15% | 31% |
| Sierra Leone | 70% | −15% | 1192% | 609% | 4% | 38% |
| Togo | 46% | −23% | 446% | 325% | 6% | 31% |
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ECOWAS, Economic Community of West African States.
Simulation 2A results: excise taxes increased to WAEMU minimum (50%)
| Retail sales price (RSP) | Sales volumes | Excise revenue | Excise % RSP before tax increase | Excise % RSP after tax increase | |
| Benin | 1% | −1% | 24% | 4% | 5% |
| Burkina Faso | 2% | −1% | 10% | 14% | 15% |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 8% | −5% | 36% | 15% | 20% |
| Guinea-Bissau | 2% | −1% | 10% | 13% | 14% |
| Mali | 6% | −2% | 53% | 8% | 13% |
| Niger | 0% | 0% | 0% | 13% | 15% |
| Senegal | 0% | 0% | 0% | 15% | 15% |
| Togo | 0% | 0% | 0% | 6% | 6% |
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WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Simulation 2B results: excise taxes increased to WAEMU maximum (150%)
| Retail sales price (RSP) | Sales volumes | Excise revenue | Excise % RSP before tax increase | Excise % RSP after tax increase | |
| Benin | 14% | −9% | 242% | 4% | 14% |
| Burkina Faso | 38% | −11% | 197% | 14% | 33% |
| Cote d'Ivoire | 60% | −28% | 210% | 15% | 40% |
| Guinea-Bissau | 35% | −19% | 170% | 13% | 32% |
| Mali | 37% | −10% | 323% | 8% | 29% |
| Niger | 31% | −17% | 148% | 13% | 33% |
| Senegal | 33% | −18% | 89% | 15% | 27% |
| Togo | 15% | −9% | 172% | 6% | 17% |
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WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Sensitivity analysis: percentage of pass through–averages
| Pass through (%) | Retail sales price | Sales volumes | Excise revenue | Total tax revenue |
| ECOWAS (15) minimum rates (50%+specific=US$0.40) | ||||
| −10% | 45% | −20% | 383% | 219% |
| Full pass through | 51% | −22% | 373% | 213% |
| 10% | 57% | −23% | 364% | 207% |
| WAEMU (8) minimum rate (50%) | ||||
| −10% | −3% | 2% | 10% | 14% |
| Full pass through | 2% | −1% | 17% | 10% |
| 10% | 8% | −4% | 3% | 7% |
ECOWAS, Economic Community of West African States; WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Sensitivity analysis: price elasticity–averages
| Elasticity | Retail sales price | Sales volumes | Excise revenue | Total tax revenue |
| ECOWAS (15) minimum rates (50%+specific=US$0.40) | ||||
| −0.9 | 51% | −26% | 337% | 191% |
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| −0.5 | 51% | −16% | 412% | 238% |
| WAEMU (8) minimum rate (50%) | ||||
| −0.9 | 2% | −2% | 16% | 10% |
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| −0.5 | 2% | −1% | 17% | 11% |
ECOWAS, Economic Community of West African States; WAEMU, West African Economic and Monetary Union.
Figure 2Retail sales price, excise tax and total tax share of the most sold brand of cigarettes, by WHO Regional Group, 2018 Source: WHO GTCR, 2019. GTCR, Global Tobacco Control Report.