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Taxes, Cigarette Consumption and Smoking Intensity
Jerome Adda University College London - Department of Economics; Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) Francesca Cornaglia University College London; Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS); Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) November 2005 IZA Discussion Paper No. 1849 Abstract: This paper analyses the compensatory behavior of smokers. Exploiting data on cotinine concentration - a metabolite of nicotine - measured in a large population of smokers over time, we show that smokers compensate tax hikes by extracting more nicotine per cigarette. Our study makes two important contributions. First, as smoking more intensively a given cigarette is detrimental to health, our results question the usefulness of tax increases. Second, we develop a model of rational addiction where agents can also adjust their intensity of smoking and we show that the previous empirical results suffer from severe estimation biases.
Keywords: taxes, smoking, cigarettes, addiction JEL Classifications: I1 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: November 29, 2005 ; Last revised: December 04, 2005Suggested CitationContact Information
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