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Voter Preferences and State Regulation of Smoking
Joni Hersch Vanderbilt University Law School; Vanderbilt University - Owen Graduate School of Management; Vanderbilt University - College of Arts and Science - Department of Economics Alison F. DelRossi St. Lawrence University - Department of Economics W. Kip Viscusi Vanderbilt University - Law School; National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER); Vanderbilt University - Department of Economics; Vanderbilt University - Owen Graduate School of Management Economic Inquiry, Forthcoming Abstract: Voters' preferences for smoking restrictions in restaurants, bars, malls, indoor sporting events, and hospitals are consistent with state-level restrictions on smoking in each of these public areas. This analysis is based on constructed measures of political pressure that take into account both individual preferences and voting behavior. Although smokers are less likely to vote than nonsmokers, their lower voting rate does not substantially influence the probability that a state has a restriction. Other factors, such as tobacco's role in the state economy and state income, are rarely influential.
JEL Classifications: H70, I18, K32 Accepted Paper SeriesDate posted: October 27, 2003 ; Last revised: February 05, 2004Suggested CitationContact Information
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