The Impact of E-Cigarette Regulation on the Illicit Trade in Tobacco Products in the European Union

J. Prieger, M. Kleiman, Jonathan Kulick, Alberto Aziani, M. Levi, Sam Hampsher, Clarissa Manning, Richard Hahn
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We estimate that a 10% increase in the price of licit cigarettes (which might result, for example, from a tax increase) leads to a 3.6 percentage-point increase in the illicit share of the market, which averages about 11% in the EU. \n \nHowever, e-cigarettes and their apparent health advantages over traditional tobacco products present regulators with an opportunity to increase taxes without swelling the flow of illicit goods: By allowing consumers a third choice as an alternative to either paying higher prices or buying illicit products, e-cigarettes could serve as a “safety-valve” allowing for higher taxes (and stricter regulations) on traditional tobacco products without encouraging the illicit market. This study tests and find support for that hypothesis and seeks to investigate the effects of law and policy on the extent of that substitution. \n \nWe begin by analyzing the current policies of European Union Member States toward tobacco products and e-cigarettes and reviewing the literature on the factors that drive consumers to use illicit tobacco products and the evidence that e-cigarettes substitute for conventional cigarettes. We then assemble a dataset of volumes and prices for legally sold conventional cigarettes and e-cigarettes, and for illicit or smuggled products. An econometric analysis of those data generates a model relating the size of the ITTP market to e-cigarette policies and market penetration. \n \nThe results show that higher taxes and prices for licit cigarettes are positively associated with higher ITTP shares and illicit-cigarette quantity. When the e-cigarette market is small, increases in cigarette prices have a positive and statistically significant effect on ITTP. The elasticity remains positive throughout the range of the data, although it decreases with the size of the e-cigarette market. \n \nHowever, the availability of e-cigarettes moderates the effect of conventional-cigarette prices on ITTP volumes: the more available e-cigarettes become, the less ITTP market share rises in response to tax-driven price increases for conventional cigarettes. In the presence of sufficiently robust e-cigarette markets, cigarette prices have no measured effect on ITTP volumes. Thus, as e-cigarettes become more available, the positive association between cigarette prices and taxes is attenuated. This suggests that e-cigarettes are substitutes for illicit cigarettes. \n \nConversely, demand for e-cigarettes responds positively to cigarette prices while demand for conventional cigarettes responds positively to e-cigarette prices, thus indicating that the two goods are substitutes. However, while higher cigarette prices are strongly associated with larger e-cigarette markets, the same cannot be found for cigarette regulation here. \n \nOther important findings include that: \n \n• E-cigarette revenue responds positively to cigarette prices, negatively to product bans, and negatively to stricter regulation (although the evidence is mixed regarding the last point). \n \n• More stringent tobacco regulation, particularly health warnings on packaging, is associated with lower demand for cigarettes. \n \n• Demand for e-cigarettes responds negatively to its own price and to the stringency of regulation aimed at vaping. \n \n• No e-cigarette regulation at all is most conducive to e-cigarette sales; all the other regulatory coefficients are negative. \n \n• Strict limits on public use and pharma-only regimes are about equally detrimental to e-cigarette sales, and the apparent impacts are large. \n \n• The Tobacco Products Directive has been more favorable for e-cigarette sales than either of those regimes, but not as good as no regulation. \n \nPolicy discussions and recommendations are presented. Optimal taxation would establish excise duties for combustible nicotine products at a rate that deters initiation and incentivizes switching to lower-risk products, while avoiding diversion to the black market. Non-combustible products should then be taxed at a low, zero, or even a negative level. 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引用次数: 4

Abstract

This appendices to this report can be found at: (https://ssrn.com/abstract=3435260). In regulating tobacco products, governments seek to promote public health by discouraging consumption. However, imposing regulatory costs and taxes on licit producers and consumers presents an economic opportunity to criminal actors to profit from skirting these laws. Illicit trade in tobacco products (ITTP) thus frustrates the goals of tobacco regulation. We estimate that a 10% increase in the price of licit cigarettes (which might result, for example, from a tax increase) leads to a 3.6 percentage-point increase in the illicit share of the market, which averages about 11% in the EU. However, e-cigarettes and their apparent health advantages over traditional tobacco products present regulators with an opportunity to increase taxes without swelling the flow of illicit goods: By allowing consumers a third choice as an alternative to either paying higher prices or buying illicit products, e-cigarettes could serve as a “safety-valve” allowing for higher taxes (and stricter regulations) on traditional tobacco products without encouraging the illicit market. This study tests and find support for that hypothesis and seeks to investigate the effects of law and policy on the extent of that substitution. We begin by analyzing the current policies of European Union Member States toward tobacco products and e-cigarettes and reviewing the literature on the factors that drive consumers to use illicit tobacco products and the evidence that e-cigarettes substitute for conventional cigarettes. We then assemble a dataset of volumes and prices for legally sold conventional cigarettes and e-cigarettes, and for illicit or smuggled products. An econometric analysis of those data generates a model relating the size of the ITTP market to e-cigarette policies and market penetration. The results show that higher taxes and prices for licit cigarettes are positively associated with higher ITTP shares and illicit-cigarette quantity. When the e-cigarette market is small, increases in cigarette prices have a positive and statistically significant effect on ITTP. The elasticity remains positive throughout the range of the data, although it decreases with the size of the e-cigarette market. However, the availability of e-cigarettes moderates the effect of conventional-cigarette prices on ITTP volumes: the more available e-cigarettes become, the less ITTP market share rises in response to tax-driven price increases for conventional cigarettes. In the presence of sufficiently robust e-cigarette markets, cigarette prices have no measured effect on ITTP volumes. Thus, as e-cigarettes become more available, the positive association between cigarette prices and taxes is attenuated. This suggests that e-cigarettes are substitutes for illicit cigarettes. Conversely, demand for e-cigarettes responds positively to cigarette prices while demand for conventional cigarettes responds positively to e-cigarette prices, thus indicating that the two goods are substitutes. However, while higher cigarette prices are strongly associated with larger e-cigarette markets, the same cannot be found for cigarette regulation here. Other important findings include that: • E-cigarette revenue responds positively to cigarette prices, negatively to product bans, and negatively to stricter regulation (although the evidence is mixed regarding the last point). • More stringent tobacco regulation, particularly health warnings on packaging, is associated with lower demand for cigarettes. • Demand for e-cigarettes responds negatively to its own price and to the stringency of regulation aimed at vaping. • No e-cigarette regulation at all is most conducive to e-cigarette sales; all the other regulatory coefficients are negative. • Strict limits on public use and pharma-only regimes are about equally detrimental to e-cigarette sales, and the apparent impacts are large. • The Tobacco Products Directive has been more favorable for e-cigarette sales than either of those regimes, but not as good as no regulation. Policy discussions and recommendations are presented. Optimal taxation would establish excise duties for combustible nicotine products at a rate that deters initiation and incentivizes switching to lower-risk products, while avoiding diversion to the black market. Non-combustible products should then be taxed at a low, zero, or even a negative level. Furthermore, the optimal tax on conventional cigarettes will be higher in the presence of low-priced reduced-risk substitutes than in their absence.
欧盟电子烟法规对烟草制品非法贸易的影响
本报告的附录可在:(https://ssrn.com/abstract=3435260)找到。在管制烟草制品方面,政府试图通过抑制消费来促进公众健康。然而,对合法生产者和消费者征收监管成本和税收,为犯罪行为者提供了逃避这些法律的经济机会。因此,烟草制品非法贸易阻碍了烟草管制的目标。我们估计,合法卷烟价格每上涨10%(例如,可能是由于税收增加),就会导致非法卷烟市场份额增加3.6个百分点,在欧盟,这一比例平均约为11%。然而,电子烟及其相对于传统烟草制品的明显健康优势为监管机构提供了一个机会,既可以增加税收,又不会扩大非法商品的流动:通过允许消费者在支付更高价格或购买非法产品之外有第三种选择,电子烟可以作为一个"安全阀",允许对传统烟草制品征收更高的税收(和更严格的监管),同时又不会鼓励非法市场。本研究检验并支持这一假设,并试图调查法律和政策对这种替代程度的影响。我们首先分析了欧盟成员国目前对烟草产品和电子烟的政策,并审查了有关促使消费者使用非法烟草产品的因素和电子烟替代传统香烟的证据的文献。然后,我们收集了合法销售的传统香烟和电子烟以及非法或走私产品的数量和价格数据集。通过对这些数据进行计量经济学分析,得出了一个将ITTP市场规模与电子烟政策和市场渗透率联系起来的模型。结果表明,高税收和高价格的合法卷烟与更高的ITTP份额和非法卷烟数量呈正相关。当电子烟市场规模较小时,卷烟价格的上涨对ITTP有显著的正向影响。在整个数据范围内,弹性仍然为正,尽管它随着电子烟市场的规模而减小。然而,电子烟的可获得性缓和了传统香烟价格对ITTP数量的影响:电子烟的可获得性越多,ITTP市场份额的增长就越少,而传统香烟的价格上涨是由税收驱动的。在电子烟市场足够强劲的情况下,香烟价格对电子烟交易量没有可衡量的影响。因此,随着电子烟变得越来越容易获得,香烟价格和税收之间的正相关关系减弱了。这表明电子烟是非法香烟的替代品。相反,电子烟的需求与香烟价格呈正相关,而传统香烟的需求与电子烟价格呈正相关,这表明这两种商品是替代品。然而,尽管更高的卷烟价格与更大的电子烟市场密切相关,但这里的卷烟监管却没有同样的情况。其他重要发现包括:•电子烟收入与卷烟价格呈正相关,与产品禁令负相关,与更严格的监管负相关(尽管最后一点的证据好坏参半)。•更严格的烟草管制,特别是包装上的健康警语,与香烟需求下降有关。•电子烟的价格和针对电子烟的严格监管对其需求产生了负面影响。•完全没有电子烟监管最有利于电子烟销售;其他的调节系数都是负的。•对公共使用的严格限制和仅限药店使用的规定对电子烟的销售同样有害,而且明显的影响很大。•《烟草产品指令》(Tobacco Products Directive)对电子烟的销售比上述任何一个制度都更有利,但不如没有监管。提出了政策讨论和建议。最理想的税收是对可燃尼古丁产品征收消费税,其税率既能阻止人们开始吸烟,又能激励人们转向风险较低的产品,同时又能避免这些产品流向黑市。然后,不燃产品应该以低、零甚至负的水平征税。此外,在存在低成本、低风险替代品的情况下,对传统香烟征收的最佳税收将高于没有替代品的情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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