[THE INVESTOR] Cigarette sales in South Korea edged up from a year earlier in the third quarter of this year despite the government-led anti-smoking campaign, government data showed on Oct. 10.
South Korean smokers purchased 990 million packs of cigarettes during the July-September period, up 0.6 percent from 980 million sold a year earlier, according to the data compiled by the Ministry of Strategy and Finance.
The quarterly figure, however, marked an 18-percent plunge from 1.2 billion packs sold over the same period in 2014 before the cigarette prices were raised, the ministry added.
Starting from January 2015, South Korea increased the price of cigarettes by 80 percent, from 2,500 won (US$2.25) per pack to 4,500 won, in an effort to curb smoking.
In the first nine months of the year, tobacco sales rose 13.3 percent on-year to 2.76 billion packs over the same period last year, while industry experts noted that the effect of the price hike has been dissipating throughout 2016.
From two years ago, the 2016 sales through September fell 14.6 percent from 3.24 billion packs.
The ministry expected the cigarette sales to reach 3.66 billion packs at the end of 2016, up 10 percent from 3.33 billion packs sold last year but down 16 percent from 4.36 billion in 2014.
(theinvestor@heraldcorp.com)
South Korean smokers purchased 990 million packs of cigarettes during the July-September period, up 0.6 percent from 980 million sold a year earlier, according to the data compiled by the Ministry of Strategy and Finance.
The quarterly figure, however, marked an 18-percent plunge from 1.2 billion packs sold over the same period in 2014 before the cigarette prices were raised, the ministry added.
Starting from January 2015, South Korea increased the price of cigarettes by 80 percent, from 2,500 won (US$2.25) per pack to 4,500 won, in an effort to curb smoking.
In the first nine months of the year, tobacco sales rose 13.3 percent on-year to 2.76 billion packs over the same period last year, while industry experts noted that the effect of the price hike has been dissipating throughout 2016.
From two years ago, the 2016 sales through September fell 14.6 percent from 3.24 billion packs.
The ministry expected the cigarette sales to reach 3.66 billion packs at the end of 2016, up 10 percent from 3.33 billion packs sold last year but down 16 percent from 4.36 billion in 2014.
(theinvestor@heraldcorp.com)