TRACIT

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The Transnational Alliance to Combat Illicit Trade (TRACIT) is a non-governmental organisation consisting of corporations and select trade associations within a range of sectors including tobacco, alcohol, agri-foods, petroleum and pharmaceuticals. TRACIT aims to build co-operation between business and government regarding regulatory responses to illicit trade. It has extensive tobacco industry connections and its reports ignore any industry involvement in smuggling activity. The organisation has been successful in accessing international meetings to insert its agenda.

Background

TRACIT was established in April 2017 and formally launched in New York in September 2017. It received endorsements from representatives of the American Department of Homeland Security, the UN Office of Drugs and Crime and the OECD.1

Its first public event appears to have been a two-day conference in London on combatting illicit trade sponsored by the Financial Times and the Philip Morris campaign on illegal trade Impact.2 As well as Tracit Director General Jeffery Hardy, the were several members of the PMI Impact panel: Suzanne Hayden, Alain Juillet, Paul Makin, Luis Moreno Ocompo, Navi Pillay and Jurgen Storbeck. PMI CEO Andre Calantzopoulos was also a guest speaker.

Membership

TRACIT’s website has fluctuated between disclosing and not disclosing its membership. As of July 2021, TRACIT’s membership page listed Philip Morris International (PMI) while British American Tobacco (BAT) and Japan Tobacco International (JTI) have been listed as members on a previous version of the webpage. Also previously listed as a project partner is Crime Stoppers International, which has tobacco company support.34

Partners

TRACIT is partnered with several other similar organisations including the Anti-Counterfeiting Group and is part of the UN Global Compact (UNGC).5

Activities

Overview and tobacco funding

The organisation breaks its focus down into 12 sectors, of which one is tobacco. It says:

“Overall, for the tobacco industry the illicit trade in cigarettes results in lost revenue, reputational damage and loss of consumer trust, and increased costs in supply chain monitoring and the implementation of technologies that enable companies to track and trace their products.”6

TRACIT accepts sponsorship from tobacco companies to help in the production of reports and quotes uncritically from industry documents as part of its analysis. In its lobbying it will often share platforms with industry officials and their allies. For instance, in its introductory analysis of the the tobacco sector, TRACIT quotes from a KPMG report called Project Sun which was produced in 2015 and looks at the illicit cigarette market in the European Union, Norway and Switzerland. The report was produced on behalf of BAT, Imperial, JTI and PMI.7 Nowhere does TRACIT reference the multiple reports, supported by evidence, of the involvement of tobacco companies in the illicit trade.

In March 2019 TRACIT was awarded funding from PMI IMPACT – a $100 million initiative from Philip Morris International to support projects against smuggling. The award, one of 31 in a second round of funding worth $21 million in total, was for the:

“Development of a Global Illicit Trade Business Report, drawing upon private sector experiences and identifying solutions to supply chain vulnerabilities common to all forms of illicit trade. It examines transportation modalities, customs, free trade zones, human trafficking, criminal activity, financial fraud, and regulatory gaps. Findings will be shared with all stakeholders in response to their calls to significantly upgrade the availability and exchange of information.”89

Work programmes

Global Illicit Trade Environment Index

The Global Illicit Trade Environment Index, released in June 2018, was produced by the Economist Intelligence Unit and evaluates 84 countries on their “structural capability to guard against illicit trade, highlighting specific strengths and weaknesses”. The objective is “to improve the knowledge and understanding of the regulatory environment and economic circumstances that enable illicit trade.10 It is a key report which, with its regional and country subsets and recommendations, is the foundation for TRACIT policy proposals and lobbying. The report’s sponsors include Philip Morris International (platinum sponsor), British American Tobacco, Japan Tobacco International and Crime Stoppers International (bronze sponsors).

Mapping impact of illicit trade and sustainable development goals

In an area which has seen increasing interest by tobacco companies, TRACIT maps the impact of illicit trade against the UN sustainable development goals. It released a report in July 2019.

The report has chapters for each of its sectors and how illicit trade has a negative impact on specific goals. For tobacco it lists the goals of good health and well-being; decent work and economic growth; peace, justice and strong institutions and partnerships for goals as being affected. Again, no mention is made in the chapter on any culpability that tobacco companies have for the illicit trade.11

Involvement with UNCTAD

In July 2019, as part of its launch on the report, TRACIT co-hosted a meeting on illicit trade and the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) in partnership with the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD).12 TRACIT Director General Jeffrey Hardy addressed the meeting with contributions from UN officials.13TRACIT’s engagement with the UN organisation reflects the attempts of tobacco companies to use third parties to ingratiate themselves with governments as partners in reducing illicit trade. Other UN organisations have been targeted by groups with close tobacco company affiliations such as Concordia and the International Chamber of Commerce.14

Regional and Country Activities

TRACIT has been active in a number of countries representing industry interests at governmental level backed by its own reports. The principal report is the Illicit Trade Environment Index from which various regional versions have been produced.

Asia

  • Produced regional policy recommendations in 2018 for the region which in summary were: 15
  • Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) and Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) play leadership roles on combatting illicit trade
  • Establishing an antic-illicit trade coordinator and inter-agency task force
  • partnerships with the private sector
  • Protect Free Trade Zones from illicit traders
  • Launch public awareness campaigns
  • “rationalize tax policies and subsidies to ensure that they do not incentivize illicit trade, smuggling, adulteration and theft, by adopting simple, single tier specific tax structures, and accounting for various demand-related factors including overall consumption, price, income levels and the ensuing affordability of products.”15 The tobacco industry often uses these types of arguments regarding taxes, to prevent raises and further regulations. See Tobacco Tactics Price and Tax for more details on this aspect.
  • Establish joint investigations on illicit trade/trafficking and criminal organisations
  • Study the patterns of illicit trade flows
  • Produced a regional version of its Global Illicit Trade Index.15 Among those who were interviewed for the Asia report were:
  • Ali Salman, director of research, at Institute for Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEA). The Malaysia-based think tank has lobbied against tobacco control measures and has received funding from tobacco companies
  • Etienne Sanz de Acedo, CEO, International Trademark Association, which has Barry Gerber from Philip Morris International on its board.16
  • Seth Hays, chief representative—Asia-Pacific, International Trademark Association

Myanmar

  • Produced regional policy recommendations in 2018:17 The recommendations were similar to the report for Asia but also included:
  • Tackle pervasive corrupt practices
  • “Increase effectiveness of customs procedures to block the flow of illicit and parallel (grey) market products”
  • Partnerships with international organisations such as World Customs Organization, Interpol and the European Anti-Fraud Office.
  • Produced a regional version of its Global Illicit Trade Index.18

Latin America

  • Produced regional policy recommendations in 2018:19. The recommendations were similar to the report for Asia but also included:
  • Pursue law enforcement and customs cooperation through expanding the Pacific Alliance (Alianza del Pacifico) or “through projects sponsored by Ameripol, the InterAmerican Development Bank (IDB) or the World Customs Organization (WCO).”
  • Intensify public-private coordination and uses examples from Argentina and Costa Rica (see below)
  • Strengthen copyright protection enforcement
  • fully adopt anti-money laundering regulations
  • raise public awareness about the threat of illicit trade “to help shift public perception … that contraband is not a minor issue but a national security problem, with links to organized crime.”19
  • In September 2019 TRACIT participated in the 7th INTERPOL Global Conference on Human Trafficking and Migrant Smuggling, in Buenos Aires.20 This had 750 people attending from 97 countries.
  • In June 2019 TRACIT was in Buenos Aires at the Regional Summit on Security and Illicit Trade hosted by the business newspaper’ “El Cronista”. The panels included discussions on public-private cooperation and the vulnerabilities of Free Trade Zones.21 Director-General Jeffrey Hardy particularly highlighted the need to curb illicit trade in Free Trade Zones. Philip Morris International had a strong presence at the event with representatives from its PMI Impact anti-illicit project as well as providing media support.22

Argentina

  • In June 2019 TRACIT highlighted how fighting illicit trade is essential for attracting investment and creating growth opportunities during a National Roundtable for Fair Trade hosted by the Argentina Medium Business Confederation (CAME). A press release from TRACIT said that Director-General Jeffrey Hardy “called on Latin American governments to rationalize tax policies that can incentivize illicit trade”.23

Colombia

  • Produced policy recommendations which repeated many of those from the Latin American policy report (see above).24 In particular it says “Colombia should simplify its current structure following OECD standards + VAT and reduce the tax burden to decrease the current high incentives for the illicit market.”24

The Ministry of Health of Brazil and the National Commission overseeing the implementation of the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control have provided solid arguments on this issue of taxation and these have become useful for the rest of the countries in the region, as well as Colombia.

“There is solid evidence that reducing tobacco tax is an inappropriate initiative to reduce illicit trade. Studies, including a recent World Bank review, point out that the main determinant of the illegal tobacco product market is not the difference in taxation of tobacco products between countries but the dominance of this market by organized crime factions, attracted by profitability and impunity, resulting from the soft penalties applied to this offense. In addition, countries that have reduced tobacco taxes to try to reduce illicit trade have experienced reduced tax collection, smoking growth, especially among young people, and no positive effect on smuggling. This was the case of Canada and Sweden in the 1990s. In Brazil, also in the 1990s, the Federal Revenue Service lowered taxes on cigarettes to limit smuggling. However, tax revenues fell, and illicit trade continued to grow”25

  • In October 2018 at a meeting in Bogota, TRACIT urged Colombia to work with the private sector to develop a comprehensive and effective anti-illicit trade program to curb illicit goods that harm legitimate businesses, workers, consumers and governments. Colombia ranks 43 out of 84 on TRACIT’s Global Illicit Trade Environment Index, primarily because of issues around transparency and governance of its Free Trade Zones (FTZs).26

Costa Rica

  • Produced policy recommendations which repeated many of those from the Latin American policy report (see above).27 In addition it recommends strengthening the Comision Mixta de Lucha Contra el Comercio Ilicito, composed by representatives from the Ministries of Health, of Finance, of Home Affairs, from the Customs Office and the Police force. This Commission was created in 2014 and later on, representatives from the chambers of commerce and industry were added as members as well. 28 Costa Rican Civil Society have exposed the conflict of interest of this Commission and made a formal claim to the government in 2016, given that the representatives of the industry come from the Costa Rican-American Chamber of Commerce (AmCham), whose members include British American Tobacco and Philip Morris International.29
  • In August 2018 TRACIT addressed government officials and industry stakeholders during a conference on Illicit trade, hosted by AmCham, which has tobacco industry members.30 The conference featured a presentation on TRACIT’s Global Illicit Trade Environment Index, which ranks Costa Rica 46th of 84 countries evaluated on the extent they enable or prevent illicit trade. Gerardo Lizano, AmCham’s representative to the Comision Mixta de Lucha Contra el Comercio Ilicito, and Nogui Acosta, vice minister of income in the Ministry of Finance, spoke at the event.31

Dominican Republic

  • Produced a country briefing based on its Global Illicit Trade Environment Index (see above).32 The report quoted Manuel Cabral as an expert on local markets for alcohol and tobacco products as saying “frequent and piecemeal changes in tax policy create distortions that ultimately the use of illegal products”. Cabral worked for Philip Morris International from the country from 2011 to 2017, ending up as director of corporate affairs for the Dominican Republic and Caribbean33 Among those listed as sponsors and contributors to the country report were British American Tobacco, Crime Stoppers International, Japan Tobacco International, and Philip Morris International
  • Produced policy recommendations which repeated many of those from the Latin American policy report (see above).34
  • In May 2019 TRACIT addressed government officials and industry stakeholders during a conference on Illicit trade. It was hosted by the Association of Industries of the Dominican Republic, the British Embassy and the British Chamber of Commerce of the Dominican Republic. The Chamber of Commerce has BAT subsidiary BAT Republica Dominicana and Imperial Tobacco subsidiary Tabacalera De Garcias.35
  • TRACIT’s Director-General, Jeffrey Hardy, called for more public-private partnerships saying they are “essential to the design and implementation of effective programs to prevent illicit, contraband and counterfeit products.”36 Such partnerships could provide a means for tobacco companies to engage with governments and circumvent the Framework Convention on Tobacco Control article 5.3.

Ecuador

  • Produced policy recommendations which repeated many of those from the Latin American policy report (see above).37 It highlighted the need for “strong and proactive measures” in strengthening the protection of Free Trade Zones
  • In November 2018, TRACIT addressed government officials and industry stakeholders during a conference on Illicit trade, hosted by Cámara de Industrias y Producción (CIP). The current vice- president of CIP worked previously as Corporate Affairs Director for Ecuador and Peru at Philip Morris International for 2 and a half years, before taking on her current position at CIP. 38 The conference featured a presentation on TRACIT’s Global Illicit Trade Environment Index, which ranks Ecuador 60th of 84 countries evaluated on the extent they enable or prevent illicit trade. “The country serves as a major transit point for illicit goods in the region, including … illicit trade in tobacco…”39

Panama

  • In 2017, Ulrike Bonnier from TRACIT participated in a session exploring actions to combat human trafficking and other forms of illicit trades at the 38th Annual Crime Stoppers International Conference.40 Crime Stoppers International regularly engages with the tobacco industry. Among the speakers at the Panama conference were Nicholas Otte and Arturo Fernandez from Philip Morris’s Illicit Trade Strategies and Prevention for Latin America and Canada region. The silver sponsor for the event was British American Tobacco.41

Europe

  • Produced a regional briefing based on its Global Illicit Trade Environment Index (see above).42 Among those listed as sponsors and contributors to the country report were British American Tobacco, Crime Stoppers International, Japan Tobacco International, and Philip Morris International
  • Produced policy recommendations for the region including rationalising tax policies, subsidies and tax exemptions, encouraging partnerships with companies and have stronger criminal penalties. It highlighted the 2016 Administrative Cooperation Arrangement between the European Anti-Fraud Office (OLAF) and the State Customs Committee of Belarus aimed at helping investigative cooperation between them, specifically on the illicit trade in tobacco products.43

Serbia, Bosnia and Montenegro

Middle East

  • Produced a country briefing based on its Global Illicit Trade Environment Index (see above).46 The report says:

    “illicit tobacco trade has steeply increased due to high excise taxes (accounting for about 27% of the market) and new regulations that standardize tobacco packaging can further increase the demand for counterfeit and illicit products.”

    This echoes industry arguments against plain packaging and tax increases. The evidence used to support this is a news story which is itself based on a PMI-funded study.47

  • Produced policy recommendations for the region which echoed much of those in the Europe report (see above).48

United Arab Emirates

  • Produced a country briefing based on its Global Illicit Trade Environment Index (see above).49The report recommends the UAE sign and ratify the five illicit trade treaties including the WHO Protocol to Eliminate Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products. Among those listed as sponsors and contributors to the country report were British American Tobacco, Crime Stoppers International, Japan Tobacco International, and Philip Morris International
  • Produced policy recommendations for the region including strengthening co-operation in the region, having tougher oversight of free trade zones, rationalising tax policies and subsidies and improving public awareness. 49

Africa

Tunisia

  • Produced a country briefing based on its Global Illicit Trade Environment Index (see above).50The report says

    “Stopping tobacco smuggling, in particular, must be a top priority for policy makers given the significant fiscal leakages and the large profits that organized crime and armed militias in the region amass from the illicit tobacco trade.”

  • Produced policy recommendations for the region including strengthening co-operation in the region, having tougher oversight of free trade zones, rationalising tax policies and subsidies and improving public awareness. On the issue of taxation the report says:

    “excessive tax levels can reduce affordability of legitimate products and drive demand for illicit substitutes. Organized crime groups also may practice “tax arbitrage” to gain profits by smuggling products from relatively lower to higher taxed markets.”50

    As in other TRACIT reports there is no mention of the involvement of tobacco companies in illicit activity.

South Africa

  • In October 2019, TRACIT’s Director General Jeffrey Hardy addressed the 12th International Law Enforcement Intellectual Property Crime Conference in Cape Town. The conference was organised by INTERPOL, the International AntiCounterfeiting Coalition and South African Police Service.
  • TRACIT used the conference to launch its policy recommendations for South Africa, including tackling illict tobacco which, according to a paper in Tobacco Control, is estimated to compromise a third of the market.51.52 TRACIT’s recommendations echoed those for its other country reports including tying activiy to achieve Sustainable Development Goals, tackling corruption, “rationalize tax policies”, promoting track & trace and similar technology and promoting private-public partnerships.53 As examples of “valuable partners” it offers the American Chamber of Commerce in South Africa and the Consumer Goods Council of South Africa. The former has Philip Morris SA as a member,54 while the latter has Soraya Zoueihid, the Area Director for British American Tobacco in Southern Africa, as a board member.55

Staff

Senior Management

The senior management team is made up of the following people:56

  • Jeffrey P Hardy – Director-General. Hardy previously served as the Director of the International Chamber of Commerce’s Business Action to Stop Counterfeiting and Piracy. The group has consistently produced reports sympathetic to its tobacco industry members and lobbied against Plain Packaging measures. Hardy is founder and managing director of IDA Consulting, a management consultancy.57 Hardy is listed in the EU lobbying register.58
  • Stefano Betti – Deputy Director General
  • Louis Bonnier – Director of Programs. Co-author of the report on illicit trade and SDGs
  • Ulrika Bonnier – Director of Programs. Co-author of the report on illicit trade and SDGs
  • Suriya Padmanaabhan – Director of Programs
  • Cynthia H Braddon – Head of Communications and Public Policy
  • Esteban Giudici – Senior Policy Advisor

Directors

TRACIT gives its mailing address as One Penn Plaza in New York City, but it is registered in Fort Myers, Florida, as not-for-profit organisation under US tax code 501(c)(6). Its corporate filing on 19 April 2019 listed three directors: 59

Advisory Council

The organisation’s Advisory Council is made up of independent experts providing advice in a personal capacity.62 Among its members are:

  • Karl Lallerstedt, from the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise, contributed a chapter to a book on organised crime which grew out of a BAT-funded project.63.
  • Leonard McCarthy, founder of integrity and risk management firm LFMcCarthy Associates, prior to that an investigator at the World Bank.64 McCarthy came to prominence as the head of South Africa’s Directorate of Special Operations, or so-called Scorpions, which investigated organised crime, including tobacco smuggling. The unit was disbanded in 2009.65

Relevant Links

TRACIT homepage: https://www.tracit.org/

TobaccoTactics Resources

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References

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