You're reading: Zelensky vetoes law increasing cigarette prices

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has vetoed a bill that might lead to increasing the price of cigarettes, parliament stated on its website on Feb. 19.

The vetoed legislation mandated a single account for paying taxes and fees on cigarettes and would have required tobacco companies to make a compulsory contribution to state social insurance.

It would also have established a trade margin for cigarettes, 7% for wholesale and 13% for the maximum retail price. That would have increased the price by 20% and decrease sales volumes, British American Tobacco alleged in October 2019.

That led tobacco manufacturers to strongly oppose the legislation. One company even halted production at their factories in Ukraine, claiming the law would make their industry unprofitable.

But anti-smoking activists believe that Big Tobacco simply wanted to pressure the Ukrainian president to veto the bill.

Economic blackmail

Member companies of the Ukrainian Association of Tobacco Manufacturers, a lobbying group, previously said that the law could result in the closure of factories and the loss of 50,000 jobs in the industry.

The association includes four major tobacco players: British American Tobacco, Imperial Tobacco, Japan Tobacco International, and Philip Morris International.

In Ukraine, where labor costs are low, British American Tobacco’s 1,000 workers. The tobacco industry sold 47 billion cigarettes in Ukraine in 2019, according to the Ukrainian tobacco industry lobbyist, Ukrtyutyun.

As a result, British American Tobacco is the largest cigarette producer in Ukraine and manufactures global brands as Rothmans, Dunhill and Lucky Strike.

On Oct. 11, it halted production for two weeks over the potential adoption of the bill.

British American Tobacco then resumed production on Nov. 8, 2019 after a meeting with Zelensky.

Pressure to veto the bill didn’t only come from tobacco lobbyists. The European Business Association asked the Ukrainian president not to sign the law, as it could have a significant negative impact on business in Ukraine, media reported on Oct. 23.

On Feb.13, the U.S.-Ukraine Business Council sent a letter to Zelensky making a similar request.

Under pressure

Anti-smoking activists say the veto is a bad omen for future tobacco policy.

“This decision was made under the pressure of tobacco corporations. So, Zelensky vetoed the entire bill because of this margin amendment. It is an explicit example of tobacco lobbying in Ukraine,” said Lilia Olifer, executive director of the Advocacy Centre LIFE nonprofit.

Still, the veto does not mean that cigarette prices will not increase. According to the government’s seven-year plan for raising tobacco prices, which came into effect in 2018, prices will still go up.

In 2018, the minimum excise tax was increased by 29.7% up to $20. Since 2019, tobacco taxes are to be raised by 20% annually, with an option to propose an inflation adjustment.

According to Olifer, increasing excise taxes is a better way to raise cigarette prices than increasing the margin. But the bigger issue is the extensive influence tobacco companies have in Ukraine, she said.

Zelensky’s meeting with the industry representatives and the consequent veto also violates the World Health Organisation’s Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, that Ukraine signed in 2006. It says that Ukraine – as a signatory – has to “protect these policies from commercial and other vested interests of the tobacco industry in accordance with national law.”

Ukraine’s law On Measures of Prevention and Reduction of Use of Tobacco Products and Their Harmful Influence on People’s Health, in turn, states that the healthcare policy prevails over financial, tax and corporate interests of tobacco manufacturers.

According to the World Health Organization’s 2013 standardized estimate of smoking prevalence, 44.2% of men, 9.9% of women and 25.4% of Ukraine’s adult population overall are daily tobacco smokers. In 2019, statistics showed that tobacco kills 85,000 Ukrainians annually.

Anna Myroniuk, the Kyiv Post’s staff writer contributed to this story