| Literature DB >> 30974749 |
Anh Ngo1, Geoffrey T Fong2,3,4, Lorraine V Craig5, Ce Shang6.
Abstract
Although increasing taxes has been established as the most effective tobacco control policy, it is not clear whether these policies reduce cigarette consumption equally among women and men. In this study, we examine whether the association between taxation/taxation structure and cigarette consumption differs by gender. The data is from the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation (ITC) Projects in 17 countries. Cigarette consumption was measured by gender for each ITC country. Generalized estimating equations (GEE) were employed to investigate gender differences in the association between cigarette consumption and tax structures, while controlling for time-variant demographic characteristics such as unemployment rates, proportions of adults, and percent of female population. Tiered tax structures are associated with higher cigarette consumption among both males and females. Female smokers are more responsive to an average tax increase than male smokers. Among males, higher ad valorem share in excise taxes is associated with lower cigarette consumption, but it is not the case for females. Females may not be as responsive to the prices raised by ad valorem taxes, despite being responsive to average taxes, suggesting that smokers by gender may face different prices.Entities:
Keywords: cigarette consumption; gender differences; taxation; taxation structure
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30974749 PMCID: PMC6479634 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph16071275
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Tax Structure and Average Daily Cigarette Consumption and Smoking Prevalence in 17 International Tobacco Control (ITC) countries.
| Country | Tax Structure | Share of ad valorem tax | Average Consumption Per Day | Smoking Prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Australia | Specific Uniform | 0 | 17.32 | 14% (2016) |
| Canada | 0 | 16.45 | 13% (2015) | |
| Mauritius | 0 | 9.25 | 40.1% for male, | |
| Republic of Korea | 0 | 17.41 | 49.8% for male, | |
| USA | 0 | 17.43 | 14% (2017) | |
| Uruguay | 0 | 15.53 | 26.7% for male, | |
| India | Specific tiered | 0 | 5.68 | 20.4% for male, |
| Brazil 2009 | 0 | 15.4 | 10.1% (2017) | |
| France | Mixed uniform | 89% | 12.38 | 36% (2017) |
| Germany | 41.60% | 14.67 | 25% (2017) | |
| Malaysia | 25.10% | 12.82 | 43% for male, | |
| Mexico | 76% | 5.97 | 20.8% for male, | |
| Netherlands | 26.30% | 14.69 | 19% (2017) | |
| UK | 43.20% | 16.2 | 17% (2017) | |
| Brazil 2012 | Mixed tiered | 22.10% | 15.71 | 10.1% (2017) |
| China | 94.10% | 17.11 | 47.6% for male, | |
| Thailand | Ad valorem | 100% | 11.16 | 38.8% for male, |
| Mexico 2006-2008 | Uniform | 100% | 7.17 | 20.8% for male, |
| Bangladesh | Ad valorem tiered | 100% | 10.11 | 39.8% for male, |
Note: Countries in the shadow have specific uniform and mixed uniform tax structures—the two most common tax structures during the study period. Other countries have either specific tiered, mixed tiered, ad valorem, uniform, or ad valorem tiered tax structure. Year that the data gathered in parentheses. The data on smoking prevalence were gathered from various online sources such as Tobacco Atlas [1], CBS News (US) [34], the 2016 National Drug Strategy Household Survey published by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare [35], and Statista website for EU countries [36]. The information on countries’ tax structure and average daily consumption was gathered from Shang C, et al. (2018) [30].
Cigarette consumption in daily smokers by gender and country income.
| Samples | Whole Sample | HICs | LMICs | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender | Male | Female | Male | Female | Male | Female |
| Log | 2.603 | 2.547 a | 2.715 | 2.815 | 2.433 | 2.141 |
| (0.258) | (0.421) | (0.11) | (0.111) | (0.421) | (0.392) | |
| Number of observations | 78 | 78 | 47 | 47 | 31 | 31 |
Note: a The t-test results indicate no significant difference in the mean of log cigarette consumptions across gender (t = 1.010). Standard deviations in parentheses. HICs: high-income countries; LMICs: low and middle-income countries.
Gender Differences in the Association between Tax Structure and Cigarette Consumption in Daily Smokers (N = 156).
| Models | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | ( | ( | ( | |
| Tax | - | - | −0.221 *** | −0.281 *** |
| (0.059) | (0.061) | |||
| Tax × Male | - | - | 0.167 * | 0.172 * |
| (0.085) | (0.083) | |||
| Ad valorem | 0.056 | 0.055 | 0.039 | 0.01 |
| (0.132) | (0.141) | (0.118) | (0.129) | |
| Ad valorem × Male | −0.326 * | −0.319 * | 0.281 * | −0.263 + |
| (0.146) | (0.147) | (0.137) | (0.135) | |
| Tiered | 0.985 ** | 0.901 *** | 0.737 * | 0.504 + |
| (0.304) | (0.258) | (0.348) | (0.259) | |
| Tired × Male | −0.047 | −0.055 | 0.192 | 0.19 |
| (0.138) | (0.139) | (0.217) | (0.223) | |
| Income | 0.515 *** | 0.413 ** | 0.564 *** | 0.404 *** |
| (0.134) | (0.119) | (0.138) | (0.107) | |
| HICs dummy | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Percent change in cigarette consumption in daily smokers in response to tax structure changes | ||||
| Changes to an ad valorem | 0.016 | |||
| Tax structure | (0.047) | |||
| Changes to a tiered one | 0.293 * | |||
| (0.139) | ||||
Note: HICs: High-income countries. Model 1 did not control for average taxes and HICs dummy. Model 2 controlled for HICs dummy. Model 3 controlled for average taxes, and model 4 controlled for both. All regressions controlled for dummies for European Union (EU), dummies for having local taxes, a gender dummy, and proportion of adults, percent of female population, year effects, and unemployment rates. The cigarette consumption, income, and tax measures are in log forms. Standard errors adjusted for inter-temporal correlations in parentheses. + p < 0.1, * p < 0.05, ** p < 0.01, *** p < 0.001. N: number of observations