AI Article Synopsis

  • The study utilizes data from Taiwan's 2004 Survey of Family Income & Expenditure to explore the impact of tobacco and alcohol expenditures on low-income households, revealing significant crowding-out effects despite overall low spending on these items in the country.
  • Most existing research has focused on developing countries with heavy tobacco and alcohol expenditure, neglecting similar issues in lower-expenditure contexts like Taiwan.
  • The findings indicate that both low and higher-income households may experience a decline in their standard of living due to tobacco and alcohol spending, suggesting the need for government intervention beyond health concerns to address these economic impacts.

Article Abstract

In this paper, we used data from the 2004 Survey of Family Income & Expenditure of Taiwan to show that the problem of the crowding-out effects of tobacco and alcohol in a country with low expenditure can still be serious. Most studies that have investigated this issue have focused on developing countries with a high expenditure share on tobacco or alcohol, and have often overlooked the effects in countries with a low expenditure on such goods. After controlling for the endogeneity of tobacco and alcohol expenditure, and the possibility that households with a zero expenditure on tobacco and alcohol may result from a corner solution rather than abstention, we found that the lowest income households are still most vulnerable to tobacco and alcohol expenditures despite an overall low expenditure in Taiwan. Even higher income households may suffer a lower standard of living due to such expenditure. In addition, some goods and services may be perceived differently by households with different levels of income and this may be caused by the difference in composition across broad expenditure categories. Our results suggest that the government ought to tackle the problem of smoking and drinking outside the realm of health, since these expenditures may harm the country's standard of living even when there is high income.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.01.007DOI Listing

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