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The Role of Tobacco Taxes in Starting and Quitting Smoking: Duration Analysis of British Data
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2001
Year
Tobacco CessationOptimal TaxationPolicy AnalysisTobacco ControlNicotineBritish DataPublic HealthTax ElasticitySmoking Related Lung DiseaseTax PolicyHealth SciencesTobacco TaxesHealth PolicyTobacco UseTax RateTax AvoidanceHealth EconomicsAddictionPublic EconomicsGlobal HealthDuration AnalysisEconometricsTobacco PolicyVaping
Summary The annual 5% increase in tobacco taxes in real terms proposed in the recent White Paper on smoking has reaffirmed the commitment of successive UK Governments to above-inflation increases in tobacco taxation to encourage people to stop smoking. This paper presents evidence on the determinants of starting and quitting smoking by using data from the British Health and Lifestyle Survey and is the first to identify tax elasticities for starting and quitting smoking using British data. Self-reported individual smoking histories are coupled with a long time series for the tax rate on cigarettes to construct a longitudinal data set. Estimates are obtained for the effect of above-inflation tax rises on the age of starting smoking and the number of years of smoking. The estimates of the tax elasticity of the age of starting smoking are 0.16 for men and 0.08 for women. The estimates of the tax elasticity of quitting are −0.60 for men and −0.46 for women. These are robust to different specifications.