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March 2008

News & Media

Cigarette Tax Evasion Costs New Yorkers $600 Million 
March 11, 2008 

ALBANY – The fiscal toll of the New York State tax department's continued refusal to curb rampant cigarette tax evasion has climbed to more than $1.6 million per day in lost tax revenue, according to a new economic analysis commissioned by the New York Association of Convenience Stores (NYACS).

According to NYACS, if the state enforced the collection of taxes on Native American tribal sales of cigarettes to non-Indian customers – as it is supposed to under current state law – new revenues to the state would range from $575 million to $625 million per year, according to the report, "An Update: Additional Cigarette Tax Revenue Sources For New York State" (PDF). The report was prepared by widely respected economist Brian P. O'Connor Ph. D., former director of U.S. economics for IBM Corp.

Due to an increase in market share from the large cigarette excise tax rate hikes by New York State and New York City in early 2002 and other state and city governments in recent years, the estimate of the impact of Indian sales to non-Indians is nearly 40 percent higher than in O'Connor's original cigarette tax loss study, performed in 2002 for the Fair Application of Cigarette Tax (FACT) Alliance, which NYACS was a part of.

"This confirms that New York's cigarette tax evasion epidemic is spreading," said NYACS President James Calvin in a press release. "While the Spitzer administration fiddles, the state continues to lose more than $1.6 million in legitimate tax revenue every day."

State law directs that the state pre-collect state taxes on cigarettes and motor fuels from wholesale distributors before they deliver those products to Native American tribal stores. The mandate took effect March 1, 2006. But then-Governor Pataki refused to enforce it even though he signed it, and Governor Spitzer has followed suit, even though he promised during the 2006 gubernatorial campaign to implement it.

Calvin pointed out that O'Connor's estimates do not include lost tax revenue on sales of motor fuel by Native American tribal stores to non-Native American New Yorkers and lost sales tax revenue on other taxable products that cigarette and motor fuels customers often purchase during their visits, "but I'm quite sure that if those were factored in, you would be approaching a billion dollars a year in lost tax revenue," he said.

"Given the alarming magnitude of cigarette tax evasion, this is no time to be talking about increasing New York's cigarette tax rate," Calvin added. Anti-smoking groups last week recommended doubling the tax to $3.00 per pack statewide, and some state leaders have seemed open to the possibility.

"That would be like trying to warm your house in mid-January by cranking up the thermostat with the windows open," Calvin said. "As long as the Spitzer administration turns a blind eye to cigarette tax evasion, any attempt to raise more money with a higher tax rate will be utterly self-defeating. It would only drive thousands more smokers into the arms of unlicensed, unregulated, untaxed outlets – and destroy what's left of New York's law-abiding convenience store industry."