The analysis of WHO data as published by Tobacco Institute of India, shows that as a percentage of per capita GDP, the taxes on cigarettes in India is one of the highest in the world. While that has brought down the cigarette industry라이브 바카라 market share of the total tobacco market in India from 21% in 1982 to about 10% around 2023-24, the tobacco consumption in the country for the same period has grown by 49%. Therefore, it is clear that taxation burden on the tobacco industry is almost always aimed purely at cigarettes since it is the only portion of the tobacco industry which is well organised and represented by well governed formal structures. In the absence of alternatives, consumers are more likely to veer towards unregulated, imported cigarettes mostly produced in China or counterfeit cigarettes which is currently growing rapidly in India. The TII handbook on illegal cigarette trade suggests that the government loses about Rs 21,000 crores in revenues annually to illegal cigarettes and counterfeits which do not bear the pictorial warnings and are cheaper due to tax evasion. They are also not regulated and therefore riskier for the consumers. Further, by leaving millions of its citizens without safer alternatives or a government funded path to cure, the government will be abrogating its citizens’ rights under Article 21 of the Constitution by effectively snatching away all dignified options from its cigarette smoking citizens. It is safe to say that such high GST slab at least at the level of being a useful deterrent, misses the woods for the trees from a policy objective perspective,