烟草税增加和行业定价对吸烟行为和不平等的影响:一项混合方法研究

Timea Partos, R. Hiscock, Anna B. Gilmore, J. Branston, S. Hitchman, A. McNeill
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Tobacco taxation changes occurred in the UK over the study period, including annual increases, a shift in structure from ad valorem to specific taxation and relatively higher increases on roll-your-own tobacco than on factory-made cigarettes. Objectives: Understanding tobacco industry pricing strategies in response to tax changes and the impact of tax on smokers’ behaviour, including tax evasion and avoidance, as well as the effect on smoking inequalities. Synthesising findings to inform how taxation can be improved as a public health intervention. Design: Qualitative analysis and evidence synthesis (commercial and Nielsen data) and longitudinal and aggregate cross-sectional analyses (International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project data). Setting: The UK, from 2002 to 2016. Data sources and participants: Data were from the tobacco industry commercial literature and retail tobacco sales data (Nielsen, New York, NY, USA). 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The tobacco industry raised prices gradually to soften impact; this was less possible with larger tax increases. Budget measures to reduce cheap product availability failed due to new cheap factory-made products, price marking and small packs. In 2014, smokers could buy factory-made (roll-your-own tobacco) cigarettes at real prices similar to 2002. Exclusive roll-your-own tobacco and mixed factory-made cigarettes DOI: 10.3310/phr08060 PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH 2020 VOL. 8 NO. 6 © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2020. This work was produced by Partos et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK. v and roll-your-own tobacco use increased, whereas exclusive factory-made cigarette use decreased, alongside increased cheap product use, rather than quitting. Quitting behaviours were associated with higher taxes. Smokers consumed fewer factory-made cigarettes and reduced roll-your-own tobacco weight over time. Apparent illicit purchasing did not increase. Disadvantaged and dependent smokers struggled with tobacco affordability and were more likely to smoke cheaper products, but disadvantage did not affect quit success. Limitations: Different for each data set; triangulation increased confidence. Conclusions: The tobacco industry overshifted taxes and increased revenues, even when tax increases were high. Therefore, tobacco taxes can be further increased to reduce price differentials and recoup public health costs. Government strategies on illicit tobacco appear effective. Large, sudden tax increases would reduce the industry’s ability to manipulate prices, decrease affordability and increase quitting behaviours. More disadvantaged, and dependent, smokers need more help with quitting. Future work: Assessing the impact of tax changes made since 2014; changing how tax changes are introduced (e.g. sudden intermittent or smaller continuous); and tax changes on tobacco initiation. Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 8, No. 6. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. 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The tobacco industry raised prices gradually to soften impact; this was less possible with larger tax increases. Budget measures to reduce cheap product availability failed due to new cheap factory-made products, price marking and small packs. In 2014, smokers could buy factory-made (roll-your-own tobacco) cigarettes at real prices similar to 2002. Exclusive roll-your-own tobacco and mixed factory-made cigarettes DOI: 10.3310/phr08060 PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH 2020 VOL. 8 NO. 6 © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2020. This work was produced by Partos et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. 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引用次数: 13

摘要

烟草税增加和行业定价对吸烟行为和不平等的影响:一项混合方法研究Timea R Partoso,1 Rosemary Hiscocko,2 Anna B Gilmoreo,2 Robert Branstono,3 Sara Hitchmano 1和Ann McNeillo 1*1英国伦敦国王学院精神病学、心理学和神经科学研究所国家成瘾中心,英国3英国巴斯大学管理学院治理与监管中心*通讯作者ann.mcneill@kcl.ac.uk背景:通过税收提高烟草价格对减少吸烟率和不平等现象非常有效。为了达到最佳效果,了解烟草行业和吸烟者的反应至关重要。在研究期间,英国的烟草税发生了变化,包括每年增加一次,结构从从价税向从价税转变,以及自制烟草的增幅相对高于工厂制造的香烟。目标:了解烟草行业应对税收变化的定价策略、税收对吸烟者行为的影响,包括逃税和避税,以及对吸烟不平等的影响。综合研究结果,以告知如何将税收作为公共卫生干预措施加以改进。设计:定性分析和证据综合(商业和尼尔森数据)以及纵向和汇总横截面分析(国际烟草控制政策评估项目数据)。背景:英国,从2002年到2016年。数据来源和参与者:数据来自烟草行业商业文献和零售烟草销售数据(尼尔森,纽约,纽约,美国)。参与者是来自国际烟草控制政策评估项目10项调查的吸烟者和戒烟者的纵向队列(每次调查约1500名参与者)。主要结果指标:(1)烟草行业定价策略,(2)一段时间内按细分市场的销售量和价格,以及(3)吸烟者的行为,包括购买的产品、来源、品牌、消费、戒烟尝试、成功率和社会人口差异。回顾方法:检索烟草行业商业文献中提及的烟草产品和价格区间,共提取517篇文章。结果:烟草业在增税(过度转移)的基础上提高了价格,尤其是对优质产品,最近,烟草业过度转移了更多的廉价自己卷的烟草,而不是工厂制造的香烟。价格上涨越来越多地来自行业创收而非税收。烟草行业逐步提高价格以减轻影响;如果增税幅度更大,这种情况就不太可能发生。由于新的廉价工厂制造产品、价格标记和小包装,减少廉价产品供应的预算措施失败了。2014年,吸烟者可以以与2002年类似的实际价格购买工厂制造的(自己卷烟草)香烟。独家卷你自己的烟草和混合工厂制造的香烟DOI:10.3310/phr08060《公共卫生研究2020》第8卷第6期©女王印刷厂和HMSO 2020控制器。这项工作是由Partos等人根据卫生和社会保健国务秘书发布的委托合同条款制作的。本期可以出于私人研究和研究的目的自由复制,摘录(或者实际上是完整的报告)可以收录在专业期刊上,前提是做出适当的承认,并且复制与任何形式的广告无关。商业复制的申请应提交给:美国国立卫生研究院期刊图书馆,国家健康研究、评估、试验和研究协调中心,阿尔法之家,南安普顿大学科技园,南安普顿SO16 7NS,英国,而不是辞职。戒烟行为与更高的税收有关。随着时间的推移,吸烟者消费的工厂制造的香烟减少了,你自己的卷烟重量也减少了。明显的非法购买没有增加。处境不利和依赖烟草的吸烟者难以负担烟草的费用,更可能吸食更便宜的产品,但处境不利并不影响戒烟成功。限制:每个数据集不同;三角测量增加了信心。结论:烟草业过度转移税收,增加收入,即使税收增幅很高。因此,可以进一步提高烟草税,以减少价格差异并收回公共卫生成本。政府打击非法烟草的战略似乎是有效的。大规模、突然的增税将降低该行业操纵价格的能力,降低负担能力,并增加戒烟行为。处境更不利、更依赖他人的吸烟者需要更多的戒烟帮助。
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Impact of tobacco tax increases and industry pricing on smoking behaviours and inequalities: a mixed-methods study
Impact of tobacco tax increases and industry pricing on smoking behaviours and inequalities: a mixed-methods study Timea R Partoso ,1 Rosemary Hiscocko ,2 Anna B Gilmoreo ,2 J Robert Branstono ,3 Sara Hitchmano 1 and Ann McNeillo 1* 1National Addiction Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London, London, UK 2Department for Health, University of Bath, Bath, UK 3Centre for Governance and Regulation, School of Management, University of Bath, Bath, UK *Corresponding author ann.mcneill@kcl.ac.uk Background: Increasing tobacco prices through taxation is very effective for reducing smoking prevalence and inequalities. For optimum effect, understanding how the tobacco industry and smokers respond is essential. Tobacco taxation changes occurred in the UK over the study period, including annual increases, a shift in structure from ad valorem to specific taxation and relatively higher increases on roll-your-own tobacco than on factory-made cigarettes. Objectives: Understanding tobacco industry pricing strategies in response to tax changes and the impact of tax on smokers’ behaviour, including tax evasion and avoidance, as well as the effect on smoking inequalities. Synthesising findings to inform how taxation can be improved as a public health intervention. Design: Qualitative analysis and evidence synthesis (commercial and Nielsen data) and longitudinal and aggregate cross-sectional analyses (International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project data). Setting: The UK, from 2002 to 2016. Data sources and participants: Data were from the tobacco industry commercial literature and retail tobacco sales data (Nielsen, New York, NY, USA). Participants were a longitudinal cohort (with replenishment) of smokers and ex-smokers from 10 surveys of the International Tobacco Control Policy Evaluation Project (around 1500 participants per survey). Main outcome measures: (1) Tobacco industry pricing strategies, (2) sales volumes and prices by segments over time and (3) smokers’ behaviours, including products purchased, sources, brands, consumption, quit attempts, success and sociodemographic differences. Review methods: Tobacco industry commercial literature was searched for mentions of tobacco products and price segments, with 517 articles extracted. Results: The tobacco industry increased prices on top of tax increases (overshifting), particularly on premium products, and, recently, the tobacco industry overshifted more on cheap roll-your-own tobacco than on factory-made cigarettes. Increasingly, price rises were from industry revenue generation rather than tax. The tobacco industry raised prices gradually to soften impact; this was less possible with larger tax increases. Budget measures to reduce cheap product availability failed due to new cheap factory-made products, price marking and small packs. In 2014, smokers could buy factory-made (roll-your-own tobacco) cigarettes at real prices similar to 2002. Exclusive roll-your-own tobacco and mixed factory-made cigarettes DOI: 10.3310/phr08060 PUBLIC HEALTH RESEARCH 2020 VOL. 8 NO. 6 © Queen’s Printer and Controller of HMSO 2020. This work was produced by Partos et al. under the terms of a commissioning contract issued by the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care. This issue may be freely reproduced for the purposes of private research and study and extracts (or indeed, the full report) may be included in professional journals provided that suitable acknowledgement is made and the reproduction is not associated with any form of advertising. Applications for commercial reproduction should be addressed to: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK. v and roll-your-own tobacco use increased, whereas exclusive factory-made cigarette use decreased, alongside increased cheap product use, rather than quitting. Quitting behaviours were associated with higher taxes. Smokers consumed fewer factory-made cigarettes and reduced roll-your-own tobacco weight over time. Apparent illicit purchasing did not increase. Disadvantaged and dependent smokers struggled with tobacco affordability and were more likely to smoke cheaper products, but disadvantage did not affect quit success. Limitations: Different for each data set; triangulation increased confidence. Conclusions: The tobacco industry overshifted taxes and increased revenues, even when tax increases were high. Therefore, tobacco taxes can be further increased to reduce price differentials and recoup public health costs. Government strategies on illicit tobacco appear effective. Large, sudden tax increases would reduce the industry’s ability to manipulate prices, decrease affordability and increase quitting behaviours. More disadvantaged, and dependent, smokers need more help with quitting. Future work: Assessing the impact of tax changes made since 2014; changing how tax changes are introduced (e.g. sudden intermittent or smaller continuous); and tax changes on tobacco initiation. Funding: This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Public Health Research programme and will be published in full in Public Health Research; Vol. 8, No. 6. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information. ABSTRACT NIHR Journals Library www.journalslibrary.nihr.ac.uk vi
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