Stoklosa Michal, Drope Jeffrey, Chaloupka Frank J
Economic and Health Policy Research, American Cancer Society, Atlanta, GA.
Department of Economics, and Health Policy Center, Institute for Health Research and Policy, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2016 Oct;18(10):1973-1980. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntw109. Epub 2016 Apr 16.
Many European Union (EU) Member States have expressed the need for EU legislation to clarify the issue of e-cigarette taxation, but the economic evidence to inform creation of such policies has been lacking. To date, only one study-on the United States only-has examined responsiveness of e-cigarette demand to price changes.
We used 2011-2014 pooled time-series data on e-cigarette sales, as well as e-cigarette and cigarette prices for six EU markets (Estonia, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Sweden, and the United Kingdom). We utilized static and dynamic fixed-effects models to estimate the own and cross-price elasticity of demand for e-cigarettes. In a separate model for Sweden, we examined the effects of snus prices on e-cigarette sales.
Based on static models, every 10% increase in e-cigarette prices is associated with a drop in e-cigarettes sales of approximately 8.2%, while based on dynamic models, the drop is 2.7% in the short run and 11.5% in the long run. Combustible cigarette prices are positively associated with sales of e-cigarettes. Snus prices are positively associated with sales of e-cigarettes in Sweden.
Our results indicate that the sales of e-cigarettes are responsive to price changes, which suggests that excise taxes can help governments to mitigate an increase in e-cigarette use. E-cigarettes and regular cigarettes are substitutes, with higher cigarette prices being associated with increased e-cigarette sales. Making combustible cigarettes more expensive compared to e-cigarettes could be effective in moving current combustible smokers to e-cigarettes, which might have positive health effects.
This study is an exploratory analysis of the issues around e-cigarette taxation in Europe. Our results suggest that taxation is a measure that could potentially address the concerns of both opponents and proponents of e-cigarettes: taxes on e-cigarettes could be used to raise prices so as to deter e-cigarette initiation by never users, while concomitant greater tax increases on regular cigarettes could incentivize switching from combustible products to e-cigarettes. The estimates from our models suggest that e-cigarette demand is possibly more responsive to price than cigarette demand. Policymakers who consider implementing excise taxes on e-cigarettes should take this difference in price responsiveness of demand for these two products under consideration.
许多欧盟成员国表示需要欧盟立法来澄清电子烟税收问题,但缺乏为制定此类政策提供依据的经济证据。迄今为止,仅有一项研究(仅针对美国)考察了电子烟需求对价格变化的反应程度。
我们使用了2011 - 2014年六个欧盟市场(爱沙尼亚、爱尔兰、拉脱维亚、立陶宛、瑞典和英国)的电子烟销售以及电子烟和香烟价格的混合时间序列数据。我们运用静态和动态固定效应模型来估计电子烟需求的自身价格弹性和交叉价格弹性。在瑞典的一个单独模型中,我们考察了口含烟价格对电子烟销售的影响。
基于静态模型,电子烟价格每上涨10%,电子烟销量大约下降8.2%;而基于动态模型,短期内下降2.7%,长期内下降11.5%。可燃香烟价格与电子烟销量呈正相关。在瑞典,口含烟价格与电子烟销量呈正相关。
我们的结果表明,电子烟销售对价格变化有反应,这表明消费税有助于政府减轻电子烟使用的增加。电子烟和普通香烟是替代品,香烟价格越高,电子烟销量越高。使可燃香烟比电子烟更贵可能会有效地促使当前的可燃香烟吸烟者转向电子烟,这可能对健康有积极影响。
本研究是对欧洲电子烟税收相关问题的探索性分析。我们的结果表明,税收是一项有可能解决电子烟反对者和支持者双方担忧的措施:对电子烟征税可用于提高价格,以阻止从不吸烟者开始使用电子烟,而同时对普通香烟大幅提高税收可促使从可燃产品转向电子烟。我们模型的估计表明,电子烟需求可能比香烟需求对价格更敏感。考虑对电子烟征收消费税的政策制定者应考虑这两种产品在价格反应程度上的差异。