Rev. Ben Johnson, senior editor at the Acton Institute, writes atCapXthat bishopsshould refrain from encouraging sin taxes.
Recently in Poland, a letter written by bishop Tadeusz Bronakowski was read aloud in many Catholic churches, stating that the “state has a ‘responsibility’ to pass laws limiting alcohol’s ‘physical and economic availability,’ and to back them up with ‘ruthless enforcement.'” Johnson, however, asks bishops to take a look at historical records regarding sin taxes and reconsider their stance, because past and present sin taxes have resulted in a burgeoning black market.
His examples range from Prohibition to last week’s vote by the New York City Council to raise the price of cigarettes to $13 a pack. “Research found that roughlyhalfof all cigarettes, and one-quarter of all alcohol, consumed in New York City is bought on the black market,” he wrote. Further, the illegal trade has financed terrorists, including al-Qaeda.
Johnson cited an alarming statistic regarding the sin tax on tobacco:
According to the Centre for the Analysis of Terrorism in France, 15 international terrorist organisations, including the IRA and FARC,benefitfrom illegal cigarettes: the smuggling accounts for20 per centof those groups’ revenues. Pakistani militants made more money from the illegal tobacco trade than any other sourcebesidesheroin.
Sin taxes are self-defeating. “It is imperative that the coalition of bootleggers and Baptists of old doesn’t give way to the less likely, more dangerous pairing of bishops and bombers today.”
Johnson’s article can be read here.
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