Proposed tax would keep tobacco prices from dropping once Manitoba cuts PST - Action News
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Manitoba

Proposed tax would keep tobacco prices from dropping once Manitoba cuts PST

Manitobans expecting a pack of cigarettes to be cheaper once the provincial sales tax dropsare out of luck.

Levy adding half a cent to cost of each cigarette would come into effect July 1, along with PST cut

Manitoba plans to hold the line on cigarette prices, despite a reduction in the provincial sales tax. (Alexander Heimann/Getty Images)

Manitobans expecting apack of cigarettes to be cheaper once the provincial sales tax drops are out of luck.

In response to lobbying from anti-smoking groups, the provincial government isplanning to imposea higher levy on tobacco to offset the one percentage point reduction in the provincial sales tax thatcomes into effecton July 1.

The legislation, introduced Tuesday at the Manitoba Legislature, is a change of course for the provincial government, which earlier seemed reluctant to introduce measures to maintainthe price of cigarettes and other tobacco products after the upcoming PST cut.

The province argued last month thathigh prices were pushingManitobansto the black market and increasing smoking rates.

Finance Minister Scott Fielding wouldn't discount thatargument on Tuesday, but he said it became clearan"unintended consequence" of the PST cut was making addictive products cheaper.

Government that listens: Fielding

After speaking with anti-smoking groups, the Progressive Conservative government agreed it didn't want to make tobacco more appealing.

"As a government, sometimes you want to listen to stakeholder groups and when they make a good point, we can make some public policy change," Fielding said."That's what we did."

The issue was raised publicly last monthwhen the Opposition NDP presented a letter written by several health agencies that asked the government to ensure the price of cigarettes doesn't drop with the tax cut.

The request, sent to every Manitoba MLA, was signed by the Canadian Cancer Society, the Lung Association of Manitoba, the Heart and StrokeFoundationandthe Manitoba Tobacco Reduction Alliance.

Manitoba Finance Minister Scott Fielding introduced legislation on Tuesday to offset a planned reduction in the provincial sales tax on tobacco with a new levy. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

On Tuesday, Fielding announced the increased tobacco levy willtake effect on July 1, along with the PST cut, if the bill receives royal assent before the legislative session ends on June 3.It willensure the retail price of tobacco will remain approximately the same once the PST is cut.

The NDPplans to endorse the bill, since the party called for it to be enacted in the first place,Leader Wab Kinew said.

Under the legislation, the tax on each cigarette willrise from 29.5 cents to30 cents. That would add 10 cents to a pack of 20 cigarettes.

The surchargeon fine cut tobacco would be 45.5 cents per gram, an increase from 45 cents.

We give ourselves a bit of a pat on the back, because it is a positive step.- John McDonald, Manitoba Tobacco Reduction Alliance

Sarah Hawkins, a health policy analyst with the Canadian Cancer Society, campaigned for the price oftobacco to hold steady after the PST cut. She worried areduction in price would put tobacco in the hands of cost-conscious youth.

"I think it shows that they're willing to look at the evidence and put the health and welfare of Manitoba youth first."

John McDonald, executive director of the Manitoba Tobacco Reduction Alliance, said he's thrilled the government was persuaded to change its mind.

"It's been a lot of hard work. It's nice to hear that people are listening," he said. "We give ourselves a bit of a pat on the back, because it is a positive step."

The agencies'letter last month suggestedan increased tobacco tax would raise $5.5 million in revenue.

The province did not provide an estimate on expected revenue from the increased tobacco levy.

Smoking rates falling provincewide

Canadian governments have been known to keep the price of cigarettes neutral in response to tax cuts.

Thefederal Conservative government did not allow the retail price of cigarettes to fall when the GST was lowered in2006 and 2008. When the goods and services tax wascut to six per cent in 2006andfive per cent in 2008,tobacco excise dutieswere raised to cancel outthe GST reduction.

The percentage of Manitobans who smoke has fallen gradually over time.

A survey conducted by the federal government found 14.5 per cent of Manitobanssmoked in 2017, a decrease from 14.8 per cent in 2015.