Economy12:07 · 38m ago

Israel Revises E-Cigarette Tax Rules to Boost Revenue and Enforcement

Now 14Right
Translated & summarized from Now 14 by baba
The story · English

The Israeli government is overhauling its taxation approach on electronic cigarettes to increase tax collection and improve market regulation. Although recent headlines suggested a tax reduction on e-cigarette liquids, the Tax Authority clarifies that the reform aims to broaden the tax base and enhance enforcement, potentially raising prices for consumers.

Currently, Israel imposes some of the highest taxes globally on e-cigarette liquids, but much of the market operates through unreported imports and sales that evade taxation. This results in minimal actual tax revenue despite high nominal rates, creating unfair competition for compliant businesses and significant losses for the state.

The proposed regulation shifts taxation from solely the e-liquid to also include the vaping devices themselves. The Tax Authority argues that devices are easier to track and tax effectively, expanding the taxable base and reducing evasion. While the liquid tax rate may decrease, the overall tax collected is expected to rise as more importers and retailers comply.

This change also addresses broader concerns about market oversight. With many products entering the market unofficially, authorities struggle to verify product safety, enforce age restrictions, and combat the black market. Improved tax enforcement is seen as a step toward better regulation and consumer protection.

The Finance Committee's discussion on the new tax order was postponed last week, and no new date has been set. The central debate remains whether to maintain high but unenforced taxes or adopt a more enforceable model that could increase consumer prices but ensure actual tax collection and market control.

Read the original at Now 14
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