Bishop, James (2015): Interacting effects of state cigarette taxes on smoking participation.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_66609.pdf Download (324kB) | Preview |
Abstract
A state cigarette tax increase may deter some residents from smoking, but other residents may avoid the higher tax by purchasing cigarettes from another state. Using U.S. health survey microdata from 1999 to 2012, this paper measures how border-crossing opportunities affect the smoking deterrence achieved by a cigarette tax increase. I estimate by two-way fixed effects regression that a $1 state cigarette tax increase decreases the smoking rate by an additional 0.58 percentage points for each dollar of cigarette tax in the nearest lower-tax state. However, each successive $1 tax increase decreases the smoking rate by 0.38 fewer percentage points than the last. I show that the signs of these terms can be theoretically derived without parametric assumptions. I observe that, as both home and nearest lower taxes rose from 1999 to 2012, the mean effectiveness of a home state tax increase remained roughly constant over the period. My results imply that the lowest-tax states are those with the greatest power to reduce the national smoking rate.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Interacting effects of state cigarette taxes on smoking participation |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Cigarette Taxes; Smoking; Tax Avoidance; Border-crossing |
Subjects: | H - Public Economics > H2 - Taxation, Subsidies, and Revenue > H26 - Tax Evasion and Avoidance H - Public Economics > H7 - State and Local Government ; Intergovernmental Relations > H73 - Interjurisdictional Differentials and Their Effects I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I12 - Health Behavior I - Health, Education, and Welfare > I1 - Health > I18 - Government Policy ; Regulation ; Public Health |
Item ID: | 66609 |
Depositing User: | Mr. James Bishop |
Date Deposited: | 14 Sep 2015 19:20 |
Last Modified: | 02 Oct 2019 16:52 |
References: | Callison, Kevin, and Robert Kaestner. "Do higher tobacco taxes reduce adult smoking? New evidence of the effect of recent cigarette tax increases on adult smoking." Economic Inquiry 52.1 (2014): 155-172. Chaloupka, Frank J., and Kenneth E. Warner. "The economics of smoking." Handbook of Health Economics 1.B (2000): 1539-1627. Chiou, Lesley, and Erich Muehlegger. "Crossing the line: direct estimation of cross-border cigarette sales and the effect on tax revenue." The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis & Policy 8.1 (2008): 1-41. Connelly, Richard T., Rajeev K. Goel, and Rati Ram. "Demand for cigarettes in the United States: effects of prices in bordering states and contiguity with Mexico and Canada." Applied Economics 41.18 (2009): 2255-2260. DeCicca, Philip, Donald Kenkel, and Feng Liu. "Excise tax avoidance: the case of state cigarette taxes." Journal of Health Economics 32.6 (2013a): 1130-1141. DeCicca, Philip, Donald Kenkel, and Feng Liu. "Who pays cigarette taxes? The impact of consumer price search." Review of Economics and Statistics 95.2 (2013b): 516-529. DeCicca, Philip, and Logan McLeod. "Cigarette taxes and older adult smoking: evidence from recent large tax increases." Journal of Health Economics 27.4 (2008): 918-929. Emery, Sherry, Martha M. White, Elizabeth A. Gilpin, and John P. Pierce. "Was there significant tax evasion after the 1999 50 cent per pack cigarette tax increase in California?" Tobacco Control 11.2 (2002): 130-134. Evans, William N., Matthew C. Farrelly, and Edward Montgomery. "Do work-place smoking bans reduce smoking?." American Economic Review 89.4 (1999): 728-747. Gallet, Craig A., and John A. List. "Cigarette demand: a meta-analysis of elasticities." Health Economics 12.10 (2003): 821-835. Golden, Shelley D., Kurt M. Ribisl, and Krista M. Perreira. "Economic and political influence on tobacco tax rates: a nationwide analysis of 31 years of state data." American Journal of Public Health 104.2 (2014): 350-357. Gruber, Jonathan, and Botond Koszegi. "Is Addiction Rational? Theory and Evidence." Quarterly Journal of Economics 116.4 (2001): 1261-1303. Hanson, Andrew, and Ryan Sullivan. "The incidence of tobacco taxation: evidence from geographic micro-level data." National Tax Journal 62.4 (2009): 677-698. Harding, Matthew, Ephraim Leibtag, and Michael F. Lovenheim. "The heterogeneous geographic and socioeconomic incidence of cigarette taxes: evidence from Nielsen Homescan Data." American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 4.4 (2012): 169-198. Herrnstein, Richard J., George F. Loewenstein, Drazen Prelec, and William Vaughan. "Utility maximization and melioration: Internalities in individual choice." Journal of Behavioral Decision Making 6.3 (1993): 149-185. Holford, Theodore R., et al. "Tobacco Control and the Reduction in Smoking-Related Premature Deaths in the United States, 1964-2012." Journal of the American Medical Association 311.2 (2014): 164-171. Jamal, Ahmed, et al. "Current cigarette smoking among adults-United States, 2005-2013." Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 63.47 (2014): 1108-1112. Kanbur, Ravi, and Michael Keen. "Jeux sans frontieres: Tax competition and tax coordination." American Economic Review 83.4 (1993): 877. Keeler, Theodore E., Teh-wei Hu, Paul G. Barnett, Willard G. Manning, and Hai-Yen Sung. "Do cigarette producers price-discriminate by state? An empirical analysis of local cigarette pricing and taxation." Journal of Health Economics 15.4 (1996): 499-512. Kenkel, Donald S., Maximilian D. Schmeiser, and Carly Urban. "Is smoking inferior? Evidence from variation in the earned income tax credit." Journal of Human Resources 49.4 (2014): 1094-1120. Leal, Andres, Julio Lopez-Laborda, and Fernando Rodrigo. "Cross-border shopping: a survey." International Advances in Economic Research 16.2 (2010): 135-148. Lovenheim, Michael F. "How far to the border?: The extent and impact of cross-border casual cigarette smuggling." Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research Policy Paper No. 06040. Stanford, CA: Stanford Institute for Economic Policy Research (2007). Lovenheim, Michael F. "How far to the border?: The extent and impact of cross-border casual cigarette smuggling." National Tax Journal 61.1 (2008): 7-33. Ma, Zhen. "The effects of increases in cigarette prices on cigarette consumption among smokers after the Master Settlement Agreement." Review of Economics of the Household (2015) doi:10.1007/s11150-015-9290-0. Maag, E., Merriman, D. "Tax policy responses to revenue shortfalls." State Tax Notes (2003). MacLean, Johanna Catherine, Asia Sikora Kessler, and Donald S. Kenkel. "Cigarette taxes and older adult smoking: evidence from the Health and Retirement Study." Health Economics (2015) doi:10.1002/hec.3161. Orzechowski and Walker. "The tax burden on tobacco: historical compilation." 49 (2014). Ruhm, Christopher J. "Healthy living in hard times." Journal of Health Economics 24.2 (2005): 341-363. Saba, Richard P., T. Randolph Beard, Robert B. Ekelund, Jr., and Rand W. Ressler. "The demand for cigarette smuggling." Economic Inquiry 33.2 (1995): 189. Sloan, Frank A., and Justin G. Trogdon. "The impact of the Master Settlement Agreement on cigarette consumption." Journal of Policy Analysis and Management 23.4 (2004): 843-855. Stehr, Mark. "Cigarette tax avoidance and evasion." Journal of Health Economics 24.2 (2005): 277-297. Xu, Xin. "The business cycle and health behaviors." Social Science & Medicine 77 (2013): 126-136. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/66609 |