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Using cigarette taxes when smokers are heterogeneous [electronic resource]

Abstract

I use a unique dataset to estimate the relationship between time preferences, social capital, and the decision to start and quit smoking. I find impatient respondents do not differ much from patient ones, but quasi-hyperbolic respondents tend to smoke more often and have much more difficulties quitting. I also find that trust in the community protects from starting and helps quitting, but sense of control encourages starting smoking. These preliminary results strongly suggest that smokers form a heterogeneous population: I argue that such heterogeneity means that taxes on cigarettes are a blunt and inefficient instrument of public health--Author.

Authors

Grignon M; Centre FHEAPA; McMaster U

Publisher

Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis, McMaster University

Publication Date

January 1, 2007

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