A MINORITY VIEW
BY WALTER E. WILLIAMS
RELEASE: WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30,
2008, AND THEREAFTER
Cigarette Smuggling
While it's
politically popular to impose confiscatory taxes on America's 40 million
tobacco smokers, there are a number of consequences one might consider, but
let's start out with a quiz. If a carton of cigarettes sells for $160 in New
York City, and $35 in North Carolina, what do you predict will happen? If you
answered tons of cigarettes will be going up I-95 from North Carolina to New
York City, go to the head of the class.
Smuggling
cigarettes is illegal; so the next quiz question is: Who is most likely to
engage in cigarette smuggling? It's a mixed answer, but for the most part,
organized smugglers will be people with a high disregard for the law. The
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) has found that
Russian, Armenian, Ukrainian, Chinese, Taiwanese, and Middle Eastern (mainly
Pakistani, Lebanese, and Syrian) organized crime groups are highly involved in
the trafficking of contraband and counterfeit cigarettes. What's worse is the
ATF found that some of these groups use the money to provide material financial
assistance to terrorist groups such as Hezbollah and Hamas.
Some
smugglers are good people who differ little from the founders of our nation
such as John Hancock, whose flamboyant signature graces our Declaration of
Independence. The British had levied confiscatory taxes on molasses, and John
Hancock smuggled an estimated 1.5 million gallons a year. His smuggling practices
financed much of the resistance to British authority -- so much so that the
joke of the time was that "Sam Adams writes the letters (to newspapers) and
John Hancock pays the postage." Like Hancock, some of today's cigarette
smugglers are providing a service to their fellow man caught in the grip of
confiscatory taxation.
In my book,
the Hancock-type smuggler is a hero of sorts. Let's look at it. During the days
of the Soviet Union, Swiss watches were illegal. During our Prohibition era,
the sale, manufacture and the importation of intoxicating liquor was illegal.
Britain's Navigation Acts imposed high tariffs and restrictions on goods sold
to the American colonies that ultimately led to our 1776 War of Independence.
The common theme in all of these acts is government seeking to interfere with,
regulate or outlaw peaceable voluntary exchange between individuals.
Tell me
what's wrong in people wanting to wear a Swiss watch, having a drink,
purchasing tea from a Dutch seller rather than an English seller, or cheap
cigarettes from North Carolina rather than expensive ones from New York. People
in government or those in pursuit of a do-good agenda think they know better
and think they have a right to use government's brute force to hinder peaceable
voluntary exchange.
In comes my
hero the smuggler to the rescue. He's the guy who, in effect, tells us, "I
know the government wants to interfere with your consumption of booze, tobacco,
or tea, but I can get a deal for you." He might have to run clandestine operations,
blackmail and corrupt public officials, but at least you get the item, if it
has been prohibited, and for a lower price if it has been confiscatorily taxed.
The smuggler
who uses the proceeds to finance destructive activity is not my hero, but that
is not an argument against the smuggling itself anymore than it would be an
argument against the practice of medicine if some medical practitioners used
their earnings to finance terrorist activities.
The easy
solution to cigarette smuggling, and its attendant activities, is to eliminate
the confiscatory taxes. Unfortunately, for politicians and do-gooders, the
attack on smokers is a moral crusade that sees only benefits and costs are
irrelevant. Or as novelist C.S. Lewis put it, "Of all tyrannies a tyranny
sincerely exercised for the good of its victims may be the most
oppressive."
Walter E. Williams is a professor
of economics at George Mason University. To find out more about Walter E.
Williams and read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit the Creators Syndicate Web page at www.creators.com.
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