烟草税的分配效应:比较分析

A. Fuchs, Maria Fernanda Gonzalez Icaza, Daniela Paz
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引用次数: 16

摘要

烟草税对健康结果有积极影响。然而,决策者往往不愿使用它们,因为他们认为,较贫穷的家庭受到的影响比较富裕的家庭大得多。本研究比较了八个低收入和中等收入国家增加烟草税的模拟分配效应。它采用标准化的扩展成本效益分析方法,并依赖各国的可比数据源。提高卷烟税的净影响包括对家庭预算的直接负面价格冲击和改善健康结果的长期效益。通过估计十位数特定的行为反应和相对收入收益来评估分配发生率。比较结果并不支持烟草税必然是累退的说法。虽然一级价格冲击造成的福利损失对穷人的影响不成比例,但这些负面冲击会因低收入群体对价格反应更强而减弱,并因减少医疗支出和通过税收劝阻吸烟而延长生产寿命而获得的较高长期相对收益而进一步抵消。在一些国家,提高卷烟价格有利于穷人,并改善了很大一部分人口的福利。除增税外,政策还应着眼于鼓励对价格变化作出反应,并针对与烟草有关的医疗费用,这些费用给穷人造成了不成比例的负担。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Distributional Effects of Tobacco Taxation: A Comparative Analysis
Tobacco taxes have positive impacts on health outcomes. However, policy makers often hesitate to use them because of the perception that poorer households are affected disproportionally more than richer households. This study compares the simulated distributional effects of tobacco tax increases in eight low- and middle-income countries. It applies a standardized extended cost-benefit analysis methodology and relies on comparable data sources across countries. The net effect of raising taxes on cigarettes encompasses the direct negative price shock to household budgets and the long-term benefits of improved health outcomes. The distributional incidence is assessed by estimating decile-specific behavioral responses and relative income gains. The comparative results do not support the claim that tobacco taxes are necessarily regressive. Although welfare losses from the first-order price shock disproportionally affect the poor, these negative shocks are attenuated by greater price-responsiveness among lower-income groups and further offset by higher long-term relative gains through reduced medical expenditures and additional years of productive life as taxes dissuade smoking. In several countries, increasing the price of cigarettes is pro-poor and welfare improving for a large share of the population. Along with raising taxes, policy should aim at encouraging responsiveness to price changes and target tobacco-related medical expenses that disproportionally burden the poor.
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