Working Paper

Cigarette Taxes, Smoking, and Health in the Long Run

Andrew Friedson, Moyan Li, Katherine Meckel, Daniel I. Rees, Daniel W. Sacks
CESifo, Munich, 2021

CESifo Working Paper No. 9232

Medical experts have argued forcefully that using cigarettes harms health, prompting the adoption of myriad anti-smoking policies. The association between smoking and mortality may, however, be driven by unobserved factors, making it difficult to discern the underlying long-term causal relationship. In this study, we explore the effects of cigarette taxes experienced as a teenager, which are arguably exogenous, on adult smoking participation and mortality. A one-dollar increase in teenage cigarette taxes is associated with an 8 percent reduction in adult smoking participation and a 6 percent reduction in mortality. Mortality effects are most pronounced for heart disease and lung cancer.

CESifo Category
Public Finance
Keywords: smoking, cigarette taxes, mortality
JEL Classification: H200, I100, I120