Publication | Closed Access
The Effects of Tobacco Control Policies on Tobacco Products, Tar, and Nicotine Purchases among Adults: Evidence from Household Panel Data
59
Citations
18
References
2016
Year
Tobacco CessationSubstance UseConsumer ResearchHousehold Panel DataNicotine PurchasesTobacco ControlPreventive MedicineNicotinePublic HealthHealth SciencesConsumer HealthSmokeless TobaccoPublic PolicyEconomicsHealth PolicyTobacco UseHealth PromotionTobacco PoliciesSubstance AbuseHealth EconomicsAddictionCarbon Monoxide ContentsTobacco PolicyVapingTobacco Control Policies
We analyze the Nielsen Household Consumer Panel to estimate the effects of tobacco policies on tobacco-related purchases using within-household variation. We also match purchases to cigarette contents from NHANES. Higher cigarette taxes reduce cigarette purchases and increase smoking cessation product purchases, while estimates of smoking ban effects are less precisely estimated. Smokeless tobacco (SLT) taxes lead to reductions in SLT use but also lead to substitution among SLT products. We find evidence that cigarette taxes induce purchases of cigarettes with higher tar, nicotine, and carbon monoxide contents, but this compensatory behavior is overwhelmed by the reduction in cigarettes purchased. (JEL D12, H25, H31, I18, L66)
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1