PRICES,INFLATION, AND SMOKING ONSET: THE CASE OF ARGENTINA |
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Authors: | G. Emmanuel Guindon Guillermo R. Paraje Ricardo Chávez |
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Affiliation: | 1. +1 905 525 9140x22879+1 905 522 9507;2. Assistant Professor, Centre for Health Economics and Policy Analysis;3. Department of Health Research MethodsEvidence, and Impact;4. Department of Economics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Canada;5. +56 2 2331 1380+56 2 2278 4413;6. Professor, Escuela de Negocios, Universidad Adolfo Ibá?ez, Santiago de Chile, Chile |
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Abstract: | This article examines the effect of tobacco prices on the decision to start smoking in Argentina. Argentina is an interesting case to explore given its high smoking rates, its recent experience with periods of very high and hyperinflation, and the mixed evidence of the effect of prices on smoking onset, particularly in low‐ and middle‐income countries. We used data from four cycles of two large national surveys conducted between 2005 and 2011 and discrete‐time hazard models. We found that tobacco prices had a statistically significant and fairly large impact on the hazard of smoking onset, and these findings were robust to alternative specifications. We also found that prices had little effect on the hazards of smoking onset during periods of hyper‐ and very high inflation, which provide some support for the notion that prices lose their informational role in such periods. Governments need to be cognizant that their most important policy tool to reduce tobacco use—taxes that increase real tobacco prices—is likely no longer effective during these times. (JEL C41, H20, I12, I18) |
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