2006
DOI: 10.1136/tc.2005.011940
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Paradoxical increase in cigarette smuggling after the market opening in Taiwan

Abstract: Objectives:To assess the magnitude of cigarette smuggling after the market opened in Taiwan.Methods:Review of tobacco industry documents for references to smuggling activities related to Taiwan and government statistics on seizure of smuggled cigarettes.Results:The market opening in 1987 led to an increase in smuggling. Contraband cigarettes became as available as legal ones, with only a small fraction (8%) being seized. Being specifically excluded from the market-opening, Japan entered the Taiwan market by se… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Papers focusing on the impacts of trade liberalisation (in Thailand, Japan, Taiwan and Korea), including those where privatisation and trade liberalisation almost coincided and thus the two impacts could not be disentangled, were excluded from the review (e.g. Sato et al 2000, Hsu et al 2005; Wen et al 2006, Lee et al 2009). For the same reason, data on Austria, where privatisation (in 1997) followed EU accession (1995) and thus trade liberalisation, were excluded (Bachinger 2004).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Papers focusing on the impacts of trade liberalisation (in Thailand, Japan, Taiwan and Korea), including those where privatisation and trade liberalisation almost coincided and thus the two impacts could not be disentangled, were excluded from the review (e.g. Sato et al 2000, Hsu et al 2005; Wen et al 2006, Lee et al 2009). For the same reason, data on Austria, where privatisation (in 1997) followed EU accession (1995) and thus trade liberalisation, were excluded (Bachinger 2004).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is notable that the increase in market share by imports during this period was two to five times higher than in Japan, South Korea and Thailand, which all liberalised their markets during the same time. An important reason, according to Wen et al ( 2006 ), was that Taiwan was immediately flooded with smuggled cigarettes after market opening in 1987. According to internal industry documents, smuggled cigarettes in the 1990s constituted 17% of the total market (78% of legal imports on average) comparable to the level of legal imports.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…BAT complicity in contraband has been described in a UK House of Commons Select Committee report (United Kingdom, 2000), by investigative journalists (Center for Public Integrity, 2015) and in peer-reviewed articles on Africa (LeGresley et al, 2008), the Middle East (Nakkash & Lee, 2008) and Eastern Europe (Gilmore & McKee, 2004). In Asia, a regional study (Collin, LeGresley, MacKenzie, Lawrence, & Lee, 2004) has been accompanied by studies of Vietnam (Lee et al, 2008), Cambodia (MacKenzie, Collin, Sopharo, & Sopheap, 2004), China (Lee & Collin, 2006; Lee, Gilmore, & Collin, 2004a), and Taiwan (Wen et al, 2006). Findings suggest that smuggling was an integral component of BAT’s corporate strategy to expand access to emerging markets worldwide from the 1980s onwards.…”
Section: Background: Trends In Cigarette Smuggling In Thailandmentioning
confidence: 99%