Healthcare at stake: Quimbo seeks House probe on big-time cigarette smuggling
At A Glance
- Marikina City 2nd district Rep. Miro Quimbo is eyeing a House investigation on the rising incidence of large-scale tobacco smuggling and its impact on public health and government revenues.
(Unsplash)
Marikina City 2nd district Rep. Miro Quimbo is eyeing a House investigation on the rising incidence of large-scale tobacco smuggling and its impact on public health and government revenues.
Quimbo filed for this purpose House Resolution (HR) No.636, which sought the inquiry in aid of legislation.
The House Committee on Ways and Means chairman cited the confiscation of 32 trucks carrying allegedly smuggled cigarettes valued at approximately ₱2.6 billion last Jan. 1. These were intercepted by the Philippine National Police (PNP) during coordinated operations in Batangas and Malabon.
Quimbo says this confirms that organized cigarette smuggling remains a serious national problem that requires urgent action.
Because smuggled goods avoid taxation, the intercepted items correspond to P875.16 million in tax revenue that the government would otherwise have collected following the 2026 tax rate.
In 2023, the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) reported that the government lost an estimated P25.5 billion in excise taxes due to illicit tobacco trade.
The veteran lawmaker stressed that large-scale tobacco smuggling weakens both public health policy and tax enforcement by keeping cigarette prices artificially low and undermining the intent of sin tax reforms.
“Kung hindi napipigilan ang malakihang smuggling, bumabagsak ang presyo ng sigarilyo (Cigarette prices fall due to unimpeded big-time smuggling). And the stark price gap between legal and smuggled cigarettes waters down the effect of sin taxes and other health reforms we have so far achieved," he noted.
"At sa patuloy na smuggling ng sigarilyo, mas nagiging accessible ang bisyo sa kabataan at mahihirap nating kababayan. Patuloy din nawawalan ng pondo ang gobyerno para sa mga health programs, lalo ng PhiHealth.,” Quimbo explained.
(And with the continued smuggling of cigarettes, the vice becomes more accessible to the youth and our poor fellow citizens. The government also continues to lose funds for health programs, especially PhilHealth.)
Through the measure, the House will review current enforcement systems, coordination among agencies, and existing penalties to determine whether they are still adequate to deter large-scale illicit tobacco trade.
Quimbo said the inquiry should help close regulatory loopholes, tighten oversight across the tobacco supply chain, and ensure smugglers are prosecuted so legitimate businesses can compete fairly.
“While our law enforcement agencies have been vigilant on this case, the magnitude of the issue demonstrates the need for systemic reforms. Smugglers must be prevented from profiting at the expense of public health and taxpayers,” he added.
The resolution calls for the findings of the inquiry to serve as basis for remedial legislation to reinforce anti-smuggling mechanisms and protect fiscal stability.