The Union government’s decision to restore excise duty on cigarettes and introduce a machine-capacity-based cess on pan masala marks a significant recalibration of India’s sin-tax framework. Nearly a decade after the rollout of the Goods and Services Tax (GST), this move signals an acknowledgement that the original architecture, while simplifying indirect taxation, left critical gaps in taxing demerit goods. Far from being a routine revenue measure, the reform reflects the State’s attempt to realign fiscal policy with public health, enforcement realities and the post-compensation GST landscape.
Why cigarette taxation could not remain frozen
When GST was implemented in 2017, cigarette taxation was split into three components: GST, a Compensation Cess, and a residual basic excise duty (BED). While GST and the cess continued, the BED was effectively left untouched for seven years. In real terms, this meant a steady erosion of cigarette taxes due to inflation and rising incomes. In some categories, the excise component fell to as low as ₹5 per 1,000 sticks — a sharp contrast to the pre-GST era, when excise duties alone ranged from over ₹1,500 to ₹4,000 per 100 sticks.
This prolonged stability had unintended consequences. Evidence from the World Health Organization and the World Bank indicates that cigarette affordability in India did not decline during this period and may even have improved. With the Compensation Cess nearing its sunset, the government faced the prospect of cigarettes becoming cheaper in real terms, undermining both revenue and deterrence. Restoring excise duty, therefore, was less a tax hike than a correction to prevent policy drift.
Are cigarettes already overtaxed?
Industry arguments that India taxes cigarettes excessively do not hold up under global comparison. According to World Bank estimates, India’s total tax incidence on cigarettes is about 53% of the retail price — significantly below the WHO-recommended benchmark of 75%. Several countries, including the UK, Australia and France, impose total taxes exceeding 80%.
Moreover, international evidence suggests that illicit trade is driven more by weak enforcement than by high tax rates. India’s own experience shows that lowering taxes tends to increase consumption without meaningfully reducing smuggling. From a public-health perspective, therefore, restoring excise duty aligns India closer to global best practices rather than pushing it into uncharted territory.
Why pan masala required a different approach
If cigarettes expose the problem of tax erosion, pan masala highlights the challenge of evasion. The sector has long been one of the most compliance-deficient segments of India’s indirect tax system. Production relies on high-speed packaging machines capable of churning out thousands of pouches per minute, making output verification through conventional audits nearly impossible.
Under-reporting, undeclared machines and misdeclared pouch weights have been persistent issues. In this context, a machine-capacity-based levy represents an attempt to tax potential production rather than reported value. By linking tax liability to objective parameters such as machine speed, number of tracks and pouch grammage, the government aims to close the gap between actual and declared output.
Preventing a tax cliff after GST compensation
With the Compensation Cess ending, policymakers feared that pan masala’s effective tax burden — currently close to 88% — would collapse to the GST ceiling of 40%. To prevent this, the GST rate has been raised from 28% to 40%, with the remaining burden collected through a new Health Security and National Security Cess based on machine capacity.
The intent is continuity, not escalation. The combined incidence broadly mirrors the earlier GST-plus-cess regime, ensuring that pan masala does not become cheaper despite its well-documented links