In a letter to the Finance Minister, the state-based outfit has pointed out that classifying different products in lower rate slabs will lead to distortion and prompt users to switch to lower priced products including beedis, damaging their health in the process.
Expressing disappointment over the proposed duties of only six per cent on tobacco products in the Union Budget 2017, Dr Paul Sebastian, Chairman, Tobacco Free Kerala, said, "increasing the prices of tobacco products high enough to dissuade use is the need of the hour in the wake of reiterated evidence on the relation between tobacco use and cancer in the country."
According to Dr Rijo John, Assistant Professor, IIT Jodhpur, "As against a normally expected 10-15 per cent increase in taxes on tobacco products, a mere increase of six per cent announced in the budget is a boon to the tobacco industry."
Unless corrective measures are taken in the impending GST by bringing all tobacco products under the highest demerit rate of 28 per cent and the highest possible cess, it would be a severe blow to public health in India, he said.
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In the case of beedis, the total increase in excise tax of paper-rolled hand-made beedis was 25 per cent. However, paper-rolled beedis constitute only miniscule portion of the beedi market, as the majority 98 per cent of all beedis consumed in India are tendu rolled/hand-made, it said.
According to the latest Global Adult Tobacco Survey, beedis are the most commonly used tobacco products in India, accounting for 64 per cent of all tobacco consumption and are disproportionately consumed by the poor.
The World Health Organisation has said that taxation is clearly the best way to tackle the tobacco epidemic. It recommends that tax share should represent at least 75 per cent of retail prices of tobacco products, it added.