Sin Taxes and Self-Control

Research output: Working paperResearch

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Sin Taxes and Self-Control. / Schmacker, Renke; Smed, Sinne.

German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), 2020.

Research output: Working paperResearch

Harvard

Schmacker, R & Smed, S 2020 'Sin Taxes and Self-Control' German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin). https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3661144

APA

Schmacker, R., & Smed, S. (2020). Sin Taxes and Self-Control. German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin). DIW Berlin Discussion Paper Vol. 1881 https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3661144

Vancouver

Schmacker R, Smed S. Sin Taxes and Self-Control. German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin). 2020 Jul 28. https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3661144

Author

Schmacker, Renke ; Smed, Sinne. / Sin Taxes and Self-Control. German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin), 2020. (DIW Berlin Discussion Paper, Vol. 1881).

Bibtex

@techreport{c8290a9c1f954827a4b4c555633f10d4,
title = "Sin Taxes and Self-Control",
abstract = "“Sin taxes” are high on the political agenda in the global fight against obesity. Ac- cording to theory, they are welfare improving if consumers with low self-control are at least as price responsive as consumers with high self-control, even in the absence of externalities. In this paper, we investigate if consumers with low and high self-control react differently to sin tax variation. For identification, we exploit two sets of sin tax reforms in Denmark: first, the increase of the soft drink tax in 2012 and its repeal in 2014 and, second, the fat tax introduction in 2011 and its repeal in 2013. We assess the purchase response empirically using a detailed homescan household panel. Our unique dataset comprises a survey measure of self-control linked to the panelists, which we use to divide the sample into consumers with low and high levels of self-control. We find that consumers with low self-control reduce purchases less strongly than consumers with high self-control when taxes go up, but increase purchases to a similar extent when taxes go down. Hence, we document an asymmetry in the responsiveness to increasing and decreasing prices. We find empirical and theoretical support that habit formation shapes the differential response by self-control. The results suggest that price instruments are not an effective tool for targeting self-control problems.",
author = "Renke Schmacker and Sinne Smed",
year = "2020",
month = jul,
day = "28",
doi = "10.2139/ssrn.3661144",
language = "English",
series = "DIW Berlin Discussion Paper",
publisher = " German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = " German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Sin Taxes and Self-Control

AU - Schmacker, Renke

AU - Smed, Sinne

PY - 2020/7/28

Y1 - 2020/7/28

N2 - “Sin taxes” are high on the political agenda in the global fight against obesity. Ac- cording to theory, they are welfare improving if consumers with low self-control are at least as price responsive as consumers with high self-control, even in the absence of externalities. In this paper, we investigate if consumers with low and high self-control react differently to sin tax variation. For identification, we exploit two sets of sin tax reforms in Denmark: first, the increase of the soft drink tax in 2012 and its repeal in 2014 and, second, the fat tax introduction in 2011 and its repeal in 2013. We assess the purchase response empirically using a detailed homescan household panel. Our unique dataset comprises a survey measure of self-control linked to the panelists, which we use to divide the sample into consumers with low and high levels of self-control. We find that consumers with low self-control reduce purchases less strongly than consumers with high self-control when taxes go up, but increase purchases to a similar extent when taxes go down. Hence, we document an asymmetry in the responsiveness to increasing and decreasing prices. We find empirical and theoretical support that habit formation shapes the differential response by self-control. The results suggest that price instruments are not an effective tool for targeting self-control problems.

AB - “Sin taxes” are high on the political agenda in the global fight against obesity. Ac- cording to theory, they are welfare improving if consumers with low self-control are at least as price responsive as consumers with high self-control, even in the absence of externalities. In this paper, we investigate if consumers with low and high self-control react differently to sin tax variation. For identification, we exploit two sets of sin tax reforms in Denmark: first, the increase of the soft drink tax in 2012 and its repeal in 2014 and, second, the fat tax introduction in 2011 and its repeal in 2013. We assess the purchase response empirically using a detailed homescan household panel. Our unique dataset comprises a survey measure of self-control linked to the panelists, which we use to divide the sample into consumers with low and high levels of self-control. We find that consumers with low self-control reduce purchases less strongly than consumers with high self-control when taxes go up, but increase purchases to a similar extent when taxes go down. Hence, we document an asymmetry in the responsiveness to increasing and decreasing prices. We find empirical and theoretical support that habit formation shapes the differential response by self-control. The results suggest that price instruments are not an effective tool for targeting self-control problems.

U2 - 10.2139/ssrn.3661144

DO - 10.2139/ssrn.3661144

M3 - Working paper

T3 - DIW Berlin Discussion Paper

BT - Sin Taxes and Self-Control

PB - German Institute for Economic Research (DIW Berlin)

ER -

ID: 248078701