
Australia's Anti-Smoking Push Fuels Crime, Fails To Curb Smoking
New data reveals one in four cigarettes consumed in Australia originates from the black market a direct consequence of the worlds highest tobacco taxes and restrictive vaping policies.
The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) today condemned Australia's tobacco control strategy as a 'public health failure' that prioritises ideology over evidence, fuelling a A$6.3 billion illicit tobacco market while adult smoking rates remain stagnant.
New data reveals one in four cigarettes consumed in Australia originates from the black market — a direct consequence of the world's highest tobacco taxes and restrictive vaping policies.
CAPHRA argues this crisis exposes the fatal flaw in Australia's approach: prohibition without offering safer alternatives drives consumers to criminal networks rather than reducing harm. 'Australia's tobacco policy doesn't pass the pub test. Sky-high cigarette prices haven't made people quit—they've made criminals rich,' said Nancy Loucas, CAPHRA Executive Coordinator.
'The government's own figures show smoking rates flatlined at 11% since 2019 despite taxing a pack to A$50. Meanwhile, organised crime syndicates pocket A$2.3 billion annually in evaded excise, funding drug trafficking and violent turf wars.'
Australia's illicit tobacco trade has surged by 46% since 2020, with over 800,000 smuggled cigarettes intercepted monthly at airports. Criminal syndicates increasingly exploit international travellers, while fire bombings of non-compliant retailers exceed 220 incidents since 2023.
'This isn't just about lost tax revenue—it's about community safety,' Loucas noted. 'Melbourne's 'tobacco war' has seen shops torched and innocent bystanders endangered. The government transformed a health issue into a national security crisis by ignoring basic economics: punitive taxes without alternatives breed black markets.'
Compounding the issue, Australia's harsh vaping restrictions have pushed nicotine consumers toward unregulated products. Despite prescription-only access, 1.5 million Australians vape daily—87% sourcing devices illegally.
CAPHRA contrasts Australia's approach with New Zealand, which halved smoking rates to 6% by legalising vaping and rejecting generational bans. 'New Zealand taxed tobacco heavily but gave smokers a ladder to climb down: affordable, regulated vapes. Australia took away the ladder and wondered why people kept smoking,' said Loucas.
Pippa Starr, Director of Australia's ALIVE Advocacy Movement, added: 'The evidence is unequivocal: illicit trade has doubled since 2020, vaping restrictions fuel a A$2.3 billion black market, and smoking rates haven't budged. This isn't harm reduction—it's a policy failure that sacrifices public health for moral posturing.'
'Australia's strategy is a moralistic crusade, not public health. It's time to abandon prohibitionist dogma before more lives are lost to crime and complacency,'
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Australia's Anti-Smoking Push Fuels Crime, Fails To Curb Smoking
New data reveals one in four cigarettes consumed in Australia originates from the black market a direct consequence of the worlds highest tobacco taxes and restrictive vaping policies. The Coalition of Asia Pacific Tobacco Harm Reduction Advocates (CAPHRA) today condemned Australia's tobacco control strategy as a 'public health failure' that prioritises ideology over evidence, fuelling a A$6.3 billion illicit tobacco market while adult smoking rates remain stagnant. New data reveals one in four cigarettes consumed in Australia originates from the black market — a direct consequence of the world's highest tobacco taxes and restrictive vaping policies. CAPHRA argues this crisis exposes the fatal flaw in Australia's approach: prohibition without offering safer alternatives drives consumers to criminal networks rather than reducing harm. 'Australia's tobacco policy doesn't pass the pub test. Sky-high cigarette prices haven't made people quit—they've made criminals rich,' said Nancy Loucas, CAPHRA Executive Coordinator. 'The government's own figures show smoking rates flatlined at 11% since 2019 despite taxing a pack to A$50. Meanwhile, organised crime syndicates pocket A$2.3 billion annually in evaded excise, funding drug trafficking and violent turf wars.' Australia's illicit tobacco trade has surged by 46% since 2020, with over 800,000 smuggled cigarettes intercepted monthly at airports. Criminal syndicates increasingly exploit international travellers, while fire bombings of non-compliant retailers exceed 220 incidents since 2023. 'This isn't just about lost tax revenue—it's about community safety,' Loucas noted. 'Melbourne's 'tobacco war' has seen shops torched and innocent bystanders endangered. The government transformed a health issue into a national security crisis by ignoring basic economics: punitive taxes without alternatives breed black markets.' Compounding the issue, Australia's harsh vaping restrictions have pushed nicotine consumers toward unregulated products. Despite prescription-only access, 1.5 million Australians vape daily—87% sourcing devices illegally. CAPHRA contrasts Australia's approach with New Zealand, which halved smoking rates to 6% by legalising vaping and rejecting generational bans. 'New Zealand taxed tobacco heavily but gave smokers a ladder to climb down: affordable, regulated vapes. Australia took away the ladder and wondered why people kept smoking,' said Loucas. Pippa Starr, Director of Australia's ALIVE Advocacy Movement, added: 'The evidence is unequivocal: illicit trade has doubled since 2020, vaping restrictions fuel a A$2.3 billion black market, and smoking rates haven't budged. This isn't harm reduction—it's a policy failure that sacrifices public health for moral posturing.' 'Australia's strategy is a moralistic crusade, not public health. It's time to abandon prohibitionist dogma before more lives are lost to crime and complacency,'