Home
FacebookTwitterSearchMenu
  • Subscribe
  • Subscribe
  • News
  • Features
  • Knowledge Library
  • Columns
  • Customs
  • Jobs
  • Directory
  • FX Rates
  • Contact us
    • Contact us
    • About Us
    • Advertise
    • Send us news
    • Editorial Guidelines
COVID-19
Economy
Other
People

Too little too late for liquor and tobacco industries

18 Aug 2020 - by Eugene Goddard
0 Comments

Share

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google+
  • LinkedIn
  • E-mail
  • Print

On the first day that South Africa’s economy is seeing the reintroduction of alcohol and cigarette sales, the latter having been banned since the lockdown started on 26 March, the true impact of restricted trade in the ‘vice’ sector is expected to affect supply chains for years to come.

Prior to President Cyril Ramaphosa’s sudden about-turn against liquor sales in early July, when he re-banned the sale of alcohol after allowing it under stage four of the lockdown, SA Breweries warned that grassroots participants in its value chain had been hit hardest by South Africa’s Covid-19 prohibition.

Addressing an economic fallout webinar prior to the second booze ban, SAB entrepreneurship manager Barbara Copelovici said the two-month-long ban “had a massive impact on our supply chain.

“We tried to get a lot of smaller suppliers to work with us but unfortunately it created some sort of dependency.”

The ban, she stressed, had totally scrapped if not halved the income of SAB’s rural value chain distribution network.

“The destructive snowball effect on the entire ecosystem,” Copelovici spoke of back then, is now anticipated to be far worse once SAB has taken stock of the negative externalities of the Covid-19 lockdown.

Hard facts of what could’ve been prevented had the second ban not been foisted on the liquor trade by an inflexible government acting on public health service advice that increasingly seems ill advised, were recently revealed when it emerged that the first six weeks of the lockdown alone had resulted in a tax loss of R15.4 billion.

A further R13 billion was recently mentioned as being lost to the fiscus.

As for job opportunities, 118 000 positions are at stake as the liquor industry takes it first step to economic recovery following this morning’s reintroduction of sales and distribution.

Kopelovici indicated that despite its best efforts to sustain small-scale value chain partners through moving personal protective equipment to combat Covid-19, liquor distribution was one of its primary functions without which it could not guarantee entrepreneurial interventions in the long term.

As for the ban on the sale of tobacco, Telita Snyckers, author of Dirty Tobacco: Spies, Lies and Mega-Profits, last night told radio broadcaster Bruce Whitfield that the ban would have an enduring effect on South Africa’s consumer market as it had irrevocably changed behaviour.

She said smokers had developed a taste for illicit cigarettes, so much so that legal distributor British American Tobacco was expected to have permanently lost market share to contraband brands and traders, with significant ramifications for a fiscus already under duress.

With regard to alcohol sales, the same can be said for the rise of bootlegging in South Africa where even centuries-old wine farms, steeped in heritage and viticulture, have been found to seek out cracks through which banned product could be shipped and sold.

Basically it seems that the bans have succeeded in turning South Africa into a society of smugglers.

 

Sign up to our mailing list and get daily news headlines and weekly features directly to your inbox free.
Subscribe to receive print copies of Freight News Features to your door.

Saaff reacts positively to ports, rail and road announcement

Logistics

The decision serves to “prevent, mitigate and resolve bottlenecks and additional breakdowns”.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Durban port takes delivery of ship-to-shore cranes

Logistics

The port’s container terminal has invested approximately R1.5 billion in new equipment over the past 18 months.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Steep dip in ConCor line volume after derailment

Logistics

An update states that as a result, rail operations in and out of Durban were affected.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Rates storm looms as Suez eyes reuptake of volume

Logistics

A sudden rediversion of global traffic through the Suez Canal would unleash surplus tonnage back into regular trade lanes.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

SA pork producers fear US leverage over citrus and tariffs

Imports and Exports

The primary responsibility remains the protection of the local industry from PRRS outbreaks.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Ramaphosa outlines second phase of Operation Vulindlela

Logistics

The government would deepen the implementation of current reforms in energy and logistics.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Carrier pulls out of crucial cargo flights for Red Sea destinations

Air Freight

Disruption is particularly acute in Sudan, where civil conflict has devastated infrastructure.

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Proposed cabotage rules in line with 91 other countries

Sea Freight

“No ship, other than a South African-owned ship, is permitted to engage in coastwise traffic for the conveyance of goods between ports in SA.”

09 May 2025
0 Comments

Fuel-crime curbing causes tanker build-up at Moz border

Border Beat
08 May 2025
0 Comments

Agri processing and farm logistics under spotlight at Nampo

Imports and Exports

More than 200 light aircraft, including helicopters and small twin-prop planes, are expected to fly in.

08 May 2025
0 Comments

Saudi Arabian operator evaluates Port of Durban investment

Logistics

The brownfield development opportunity in Maydon Wharf spans 145 hectares and features 15 berths.

08 May 2025
0 Comments

Preferred bidders for Port of RB’s South Dunes Precinct announced

Logistics

TNPA said it forms part of its masterplan for ports in KwaZulu-Natal.

08 May 2025
0 Comments
  • More

FeatureClick to view

Sea Freight May 2025

Border Beat

Fuel-crime curbing causes tanker build-up at Moz border
08 May 2025
Border police turn the tide on illegal crossings
29 Apr 2025
BMA officials arrested for enabling illegal immigration
24 Apr 2025
More

Featured Jobs

New

Transport Clerk (DBN)

Tiger Recruitment
Durban (New Germany)
09 May
New

Operations’ Coordinator

Brinks Security PTY LTD
Johannesburg
09 May
More Jobs
  • © Now Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Freight News RSS
  • About Us
  • Advertise
  • Send us news
  • Contact us