Illicit trade down by 37 per cent in Singapore
Jan 26, 2010
The number of duty-unpaid cigarettes seized in Singapore last year, at 2.9 million, was down by 37 per cent on that of 2008, 4.6 million, according to a Channel NewsAsia story quoting Singapore Customs.

This was the largest drop in five years.

The number of people caught selling or buying illicit cigarettes was about 2.5 per cent lower last year than it was in 2008.

Singapore Customs said the fall in the illicit trade in cigarettes could have been due to the ‘Singapore Duty-Paid Cigarette’ inscription that, since January 1 last year, has had to be printed on every cigarette.

The inscription is said to have made it easier for Customs officers to detect contraband cigarettes and, at the same time, made smokers more wary of lighting cigarettes without the inscription, though the latter effect has probably been undermined by public smoking bans.

The drop in the illicit trade was accompanied last year by a 13 per cent increase in duty payments, which were valued at S$861 million.