Plain Packaging in the Tobacco Industry and its Impact on Trademarks
Plain packaging refers to the laws or regulations requiring that cigarettes are to be sold in standardized packs without any stylized trademarks, logos, or colors. Instead of branding information, the cigarette packs are dominated by graphic health warnings and other legally required information and tax-paid stamps with only minor space reserved for the brand name in a plain uniform typeface. As a result, each cigarette pack looks the same as every other pack that is officially sold in the market. The idea is to make such tobacco-related products less attractive to the people and discourage their consumption. Plain packaging initiatives attempt to reduce the consumption of cigarettes by restricting the manufacturers to standard packaging devoid of all branding. Tobacco manufacturers argue that this constitutes an expropriation of their Intellectual Property (IP) and points to the constitutional protections for property in national and international law.
Impact on Intellectual Property Tobacco companies have invested money in developing products that people want to buy and in developing brands to support the marketing of these products. Packaging forms a crucial aspect of tobacco companies’ branding, and brand