Effect of the tobacco price support program on cigarette consumption in the United States: an updated model
- 1 May 2000
- journal article
- Published by American Public Health Association in American Journal of Public Health
- Vol. 90 (5) , 746-750
- https://doi.org/10.2105/ajph.90.5.746
Abstract
This study evaluated the direct effect of the tobacco price support program on domestic cigarette consumption. We developed an economic model of demand and supply of US tobacco to estimate how much the price support program increases the price of tobacco. We calculated the resultant increase in cigarette prices from the change in the tobacco price and the quantity of domestic tobacco contained in US cigarettes. We then assessed the reduction in cigarette consumption attributable to the price support program by applying the estimated increase in the cigarette price to assumed price elasticities of demand for cigarettes. We estimated that the tobacco price support program increased the price of tobacco leaf by $0.36 per pound. This higher tobacco price translates to a $0.01 increase in the price of a pack of cigarettes and an estimated 0.21% reduction in cigarette consumption. Because the tobacco price support program increases the price of cigarettes minimally, its potential health benefit is likely to be small. The adverse political effect of the tobacco program might substantially outweigh the potential direct benefit of the program on cigarette consumption.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- The demand for cigarettes in california and behavioural risk factorsHealth Economics, 1995
- The Theory and Measurement of Producer Response Under QuotasThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1993
- Rational Addictive Behavior and Cigarette SmokingJournal of Political Economy, 1991
- The effects of excise taxes and regulations on cigarette smokingJournal of Health Economics, 1991
- The reliability of self-reported cigarette consumption in the United States.American Journal of Public Health, 1989
- The Tobacco Subsidy: Does It Matter?JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute, 1988
- Substitutability for Farm Commodities: The Demand for U.S. Tobacco in Cigarette ManufacturingAmerican Journal of Agricultural Economics, 1987
- Estimating Dynamic Demand for Cigarettes Using Panel Data: The Effects of Bootlegging, Taxation and Advertising ReconsideredThe Review of Economics and Statistics, 1986
- The potential for using excise taxes to reduce smokingJournal of Health Economics, 1982
- The Effects of Government Regulation on Teenage SmokingThe Journal of Law and Economics, 1981