Albertans spending millions on illegal cigarettes, diverting tax revenue: report
CBC
A new report says smokers are spending less money on cigarettes in Alberta, while hundreds of millions of dollars are instead being used to buy illegal smokes for a fraction of the price.
A report from consulting firm Ernst & Young, commissioned by the Convenience Industry Council of Canada (CICC), analyzed the illegal tobacco industry in five provinces.
It estimates that contraband cigarette sales garnered nearly $430 million in gross sales revenue in Alberta from 2021 to 2023 — costing the province more than $262 million in tobacco tax revenue over the same period (not including sales tax revenue).
Alberta's total estimated loss was the highest among the provinces the report evaluated, which included Manitoba, Quebec, New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
"Contraband tobacco in Alberta has really punched a hole in tobacco tax revenues for the province," said Sara MacIntyre, the CICC's vice-president of Western Canada.
MacIntyre said she believes there's two reasons why residents have seen contraband tobacco "kind of explode" across Canada.
"There's a lot available and there's a lot of choice to get it. You can order it online now. You don't have to go out and go to a smoke shack or find a connection," she said.
Alongside that is the price. The report said a carton of 200 cigarettes costs about $163, compared with a carton of illegal cigarettes, which can range from $30 to $55.
MacIntyre said the shift away from legal cigarettes also impacts local retail stores who are being undercut by cheaper, illegal cigarettes.
She said the CICC will meet with the Alberta government soon to lobby for more resources to be put toward managing contraband tobacco sales, including more enforcement officers and an awareness campaign about the harms of illegal tobacco.
About 29.4 per cent of the cigarettes bought in Alberta in 2023 were contraband, the report said, a stark increase from 2021 when the market share was estimated at less than half that — 13.1 per cent.
Since there are no direct statistics to measure how common contraband tobacco is, the report's calculations are based on the overall number of known smokers and consumption in Canada. It then uses that result against legal sales volumes, expecting that should represent contraband sales, or be a very close proxy, to determine the amount of illegal sales.
The money from those contraband sales can be vented back into criminal organizations, said Peter Bruni-Bossio, a senior manager in charge of investigations for Alberta's north at Alberta Gaming, Liquor and Cannabis (AGLC). AGLC runs a tobacco enforcement unit.
"We're taking money away from Albertans is what it is, and the money goes towards our health-care systems, infrastructure, programs to help Albertans," he said.
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