Tobacco Supply Meets Demands of Smokers

China's tobacco industry kept up steady economic growth in the first half of the year as the regulation of the industry's market order achieved success, a spokesman of the State Tobacco Monopoly Bureau (STMB) said.

An STMB spokesman said production and demand for cigarettes achieved a balance that kept prices stable for the first six months of 2001.

The STMB showed that about 17 million cartons were sold from January to June, up 3.8 per cent over the same period last year.

The country produced 17.2 million cartons of cigarettes, 5.2 per cent more than from January to June last year.

The industry contributed 64 billion yuan (US$7.7 billion) in taxes, up 17 per cent.

The government has worked to reduce tobacco planting, so the supply dropped.

By June this year, about 3 billion kilograms of tobacco leaves were in warehouses, 78.8 million kilograms less than in storage in June 1998.

The State aims to reduce the planting area of tobacco by 28,000 hectares to 948,600 hectares this year.

"After the government strengthened the fight against counterfeit cigarettes and began efforts to stamp out illegal activities, the tobacco market has been quite well-ordered," the spokesman said.

Meanwhile, the bureau continued to set up a comprehensive sales network to ensure sales of proper cigarettes.

In the January-June period, cigarettes sold through illegal channels reached 740,000 cartons, 504,000 cartons fewer than the same period last year.

A total of 1,080 underground factories were discovered and 581 sets of equipment to produce counterfeit cigarettes were confiscated during the first half of 2001.






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