Taxation reduces smoking but may not reduce smoking disparities in youth

Author:

Fleischer Nancy LORCID,Donahoe J Travis,McLeod M Chandler,Thrasher James F,Levy David TORCID,Elliott Michael R,Meza RafaelORCID,Patrick Megan E

Abstract

ObjectiveThis study examines the extent to which cigarette taxes affect smoking behaviour and disparities in smoking among adolescents by gender, socioeconomic status (SES) and race/ethnicity.MethodsWe used US nationally representative, repeated cross-sectional data from the 2005 to 2016 Monitoring the Future study to evaluate the relationship between state cigarette taxes and past 30-day current smoking, smoking intensity, and first cigarette and daily smoking initiation using modified Poisson and linear regression models, stratified by grade. We tested for interactions between tax and gender, SES and race/ethnicity on the additive scale using average marginal effects.ResultsWe found that higher taxes were associated with lower smoking outcomes, with variation by grade. Across nearly all of our specifications, there were no statistically significant interactions between tax and gender, SES or race/ethnicity for any grades/outcomes. One exception is that among 12th graders, there was a statistically significant interaction between tax and college plans, with taxes being associated with a lower probability of 30-day smoking among students who definitely planned to attend college compared with those who did not.ConclusionWe conclude that higher taxes were associated with reduced smoking among adolescents, with little difference by gender, SES and racial/ethnicity groups. While effective at reducing adolescent smoking, taxes appear unlikely to reduce smoking disparities among youth.

Funder

National Institute on Drug Abuse

National Cancer Institute

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health(social science)

Reference60 articles.

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5. The Effects of Government Regulation on Teenage Smoking

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