Barriers to raising taxes on tobacco products in Uganda: a political economy analysis
Henry Zakumumpa, Ligia Paina, Eric Ssegujja, Richard Ssempala, Freddie Ssengooba

TL;DR
This paper explores why Uganda hasn't raised tobacco taxes as recommended, despite the health benefits, due to political and economic influences.
Contribution
The study provides a political economy analysis of barriers to tobacco tax increases in Uganda, highlighting industry interference and advocacy gaps.
Findings
Tobacco industry lobbying and litigation hinder tax increases in Uganda.
Civil society advocacy is weak, allowing industry narratives to dominate.
Uganda uses a differential tax structure instead of a uniform tax on tobacco.
Abstract
Raising taxes on tobacco is considered the most effective measure for reducing tobacco consumption. Although Uganda ratified WHO’s Framework Convention on Tobacco control which recommends levying taxes on tobacco products by up to 75% of their retail price, in Uganda taxes on tobacco stagnated at 35% between 2017 and 2024. There is little in-depth research interrogating the political economy underpinning tobacco tax policy in Uganda. The aim of this study is to apply political economy analysis in exploring barriers to implementing WHO’s recommended tobacco tax rates in Uganda. Our qualitative study entailed key informant and in-depth interviews with 34 purposively selected participants. Data were analysed by thematic approach. Tobacco industry narratives are dominant among policy elite with a strongly entrenched notion that raising taxes will bring economic harm such as ‘killing off’…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSmoking Behavior and Cessation · Global Public Health Policies and Epidemiology · Policy Transfer and Learning
