• About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC
No Result
View All Result
No Result
View All Result
Home Health

Tobacco shadow economy requires permanent enforcement model: ACT Alliance

by Sub News
March 25, 2026
Tobacco shadow economy requires permanent enforcement model: ACT Alliance
Share on WhatAppShare on XShare on Facebook

Islamabad, March 25, 2026: Speaking at a webinar hosted by students of a business school in Islamabad, Mubashir Akram, Country Director, ACT Alliance Pakistan, said that illegal trade has grown into a major economic and governance challenge for Pakistan and that the tobacco sector remains one of the clearest and most damaging examples of the country’s shadow economy.

Addressing the group, Akram said the issue must be viewed not merely as tax loss, but as a structural threat to lawful business, public finance, and state credibility. He noted that senior tax officials and public reporting have repeatedly placed annual tax evasion in the tobacco sector at around Rs. 400 billion, while the wider illegal commercial footprint may be far larger once undeclared production, transport, warehousing, counterfeit inputs, and retail distribution are taken into account.

“The tobacco sector shows how illegal trade can distort an entire market,” said Akram. “When non-compliant products openly compete at retail, the state loses revenue, lawful businesses lose ground, and public policy loses effectiveness.”

He said recent government enforcement actions deserve appreciation, particularly large seizures of non-duty-paid tobacco and cigarette-making materials, as well as efforts to strengthen upstream monitoring and expand seizure powers.

“The government has demonstrated that when it acts with intent, the illegal supply chain can be disrupted,” he said. “These actions deserve recognition. But disruption alone is not enough. Pakistan now needs constant, year-round enforcement that makes illegal trade costly every week, not only during periodic crackdowns.”

Akram observed that the tobacco market has become an enforcement test case because the level of visible non-compliance at the retail shelf is so high. Referring to recent market reporting, he noted that hundreds of cigarette brands remain available in the market while only a small number fully meet track-and-trace and other legal requirements. He warned that in such conditions, tax increases without market control can push consumers toward untaxed and unlawful supply.

He called on universities and research institutions to treat the illegal economy as a serious area of academic inquiry. “Academia in Pakistan must speak more openly and more rigorously about the illegal economy,” he said. “This is not a side issue. Across sectors, illegal trade drains trillions of rupees from the national economy, weakens institutions, and rewards non-compliance. Universities should help produce evidence, policy research, and informed debate that can strengthen enforcement and governance.”

He also stressed that the problem cannot be solved by the government alone. “A durable response will require collaboration between the civil society, media, academia, and the government,” Akram said. “Civil society can mobilize awareness, the media can sustain scrutiny, universities can generate research, and the state can enforce the law. These efforts must reinforce each other if Pakistan is to reduce the space available to illegal networks.”

Concluding his address, Akram said Pakistan should adopt a permanent anti-illegal-trade model centered on retail compliance, input controls, cross-agency coordination, and institutional integrity. He added that protecting the legal economy is essential not only for revenue collection but also for restoring public confidence in the rule of law.

Tags: ACT Alliance Pakistanbusiness schoolCountry Directorillegal tradeIslamabadMubashir AkramPakistanshadow economytobacco sector
Previous Post

Representatives of MFP meet Isphanyar Bhandara

Next Post

Pakistan Navy welcomes Chinese warship for ‘Sea Guardian’ exercise

Related Posts

DRAP orders nationwide survey to enforce ban on conventional syringes
Health

DRAP orders nationwide survey to enforce ban on conventional syringes

Islamabad, April 23, 2026: The Drug Regulatory Authority of Pakistan has directed a nationwide market survey to ensure strict compliance...

by Sub News
April 23, 2026
Dr Zafar Mirza raises alarm over rising HIV cases, calls for health system reforms in Pakistan
Health

Dr Zafar Mirza raises alarm over rising HIV cases, calls for health system reforms in Pakistan

Islamabad, April 18, 2026: Former Special Assistant to the Prime Minister on Health Zafar Mirza on Saturday expressed serious concern...

by Sub News
April 18, 2026
Honorary Consul General of Sri Lanka Meets Punjab Governor to discuss drug prevention initiatives
Diplomatic

Sri Lankan consul general meets Punjab Governor to discuss drug prevention initiatives

Lahore, April 16, 2026: Yasin Joyia, Honorary Consul General of Sri Lanka in Punjab, called on Sardar Saleem Haider Khan,...

by Sub News
April 16, 2026
Parliamentary oversight drives health sector reforms, enhances transparency and accountability
Health

Parliamentary oversight drives health sector reforms, enhances transparency and accountability

Islamabad, April 16, 2026: The National Assembly’s Standing Committee on National Health Services, Regulations and Coordination (NHSR&C) convened on Thursday...

by Sub News
April 16, 2026
Next Post
Pakistan Navy welcomes Chinese warship for ‘Sea Guardian’ exercise

Pakistan Navy welcomes Chinese warship for ‘Sea Guardian’ exercise

Breaking News

  • Pakistan LNG Limited issues first spot LNG tender since 2023 amid supply crunch
  • Naqvi meets US Charge d’Affaires, discusses US-Iran peace talks and regional stability efforts
  • Pakistan rejects India’s ‘baseless allegations’ over Pahalgam incident
  • PSL 11: Rawalpindiz beat Islamabad United to secure first win
  • Global Super League 2026 schedule announced; Lahore Qalandars to open campaign on July 23
Sub News

© 2026 subnewsenglish.com

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • World
  • Diplomatic
  • Sports
    • Cricket
  • National
  • Business
  • Crime & Justice
  • Entertainment
  • Lifestyle
  • Environment
    • CPEC

© 2026 subnewsenglish.com

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.