City
Epaper

FAIFA urges government to roll back steep tax hike on tobacco products

By IANS | Updated: January 2, 2026 11:45 IST

New Delhi, Jan 2 The Federation of All India Farmer Associations (FAIFA) on Friday urged the government to ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Jan 2 The Federation of All India Farmer Associations (FAIFA) on Friday urged the government to roll back the notified excise rates on tobacco products and revise them to revenue-neutral rates, to disincentivise smuggling, and support domestic agriculture.

A stable taxation framework, FAIFA noted in a statement, is necessary to sustain farmer incomes, protect employment across the value chain, and align economic policy with long-term public health goals.

The Ministry of Finance notification ‘Chewing Tobacco, Jarda Scented Tobacco and Gutkha Packing Machines (Capacity Determination and Collection of Duty) Rules, 2026’ has imposed an excise duty of Rs 2,050-Rs 8,500 per 1,000 sticks, depending on cigarette length, effective February 1.

FAIFA said such a steep hike in taxes would force domestic manufacturers to raise prices of finished goods, which will lead to a drop in sales, hurting farmers supplies in return. This could cause a glut in the tobacco crop market in the near term, it added.

“While announcing GST 2.0 on September 4, 2025, Government had assured that in the case of tobacco products, GST would be charged at 40 per cent of the retail sales price, while the overall incidence of tax would be kept unchanged,” said Murali Babu, President, FAIFA.

He further added that the farming community across India has been holding on to this assurance of revenue neutrality and had welcomed the government’s decision to rationalise GST by restructuring rates and doing away with the 12 per cent slab, which helped reduce prices.

Appealing to the government, FAIFA leaders stressed that India’s legal cigarette prices are already among the least affordable globally when measured against per capita income, as reflected in World Health Organization’s (WHO) affordability index.

Current steep increase will render legal products unaffordable to a huge section of consumers, accelerating consumer migration to illegal channels, it argued. FAIFA appealed to the government to ensure that taxation policies do not punish those who have always remained within the law.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalKenya: Two people feared dead after under construction building collapses in Nairobi

InternationalTraffic deaths in Norway spike in 2025

Other SportsSri Lanka Cricket plans Day-Night Tests at SSC: Report

NationalMaha civic polls: BJP leads with 44 unopposed candidates; Shiv Sena 22

NationalEknath Shinde's swipe at Uddhav Thackeray: 'You are the looters of Mumbai, we are the protectors'

Health Realted Stories

HealthNeed approval for carrying personal medicines to Saudi Arabia: NCB

HealthCumin Water for Weight Loss: Benefits, Recipe, and Best Time to Drink

HealthGame changer: Experts hail approval of 1st oral pill for adults with thalassemia anaemia

HealthTechnology to drive space, economic transformation in India: Jitendra Singh

HealthBhopal contaminated water tragedy: MP CM Yadav to hold meeting with all Mayors, Municipal Commissioners & Collectors