1,438
Views
8
CrossRef citations to date
0
Altmetric
Articles

The demand for cigarettes: New evidence from South Africa

&

References

  • Abedian, I & Dorrington, R, 1994. An evaluation of a recent attempt to assess the social benefits of cigarette smoking. Journal for Studies in Economics and Econometrics 18(1), 59–72.
  • Abedian, I & Jacobs, R, 2001. Tobacco taxes and government revenue in South Africa. Journal of Economic Studies 28(6), 397–407.
  • Ates, M, 2017. Does grandchild care influence grandparents’ self-rated health? Evidence from a fixed effects approach. Social Science & Medicine 190, 67–74.
  • Baigrie, N & Eyal, K, 2014. An evaluation of the determinants and implications of panel attrition in the national income dynamics survey (2008–2010). South African Journal of Economics 82(1), 39–65.
  • Baltagi, BH & Griffin, JM, 2001. The econometrics of rational addiction: the case of cigarettes. Journal of Business & Economic Statistics 19(4), 449–54.
  • Becker, GS & Murphy, KM, 1988. A theory of rational addiction. Journal of Political Economy 96(4), 675–700.
  • Belotti, F, Deb, P, Manning, WG, Norton, EC, et al., 2015. Two pm: two-part models. The Stata Journal: Promoting Communications on Statistics and Stata 15(1), 3–20.
  • Blecher, E, 2015. Taxes on tobacco, alcohol and sugar sweetened beverages: linkages and lessons learned. Social Science & Medicine 136-137, 175–79.
  • Boshoff, WH, 2008. Cigarette demand in South Africa over 1996–2006: the role of price, income and health awareness. The South African Journal of Economics 76(1), 118–31.
  • Cameron, AC & Trivedi, PK, 2005. Microeconometrics: methods and applications. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.
  • Chaloupka, F, Hu, TW, Warner, KE, Jacobs, R & Yurekli, A, 2000. The taxation of tobacco products. In Jha, P & Chaloupka, FJ (Eds.), Tobacco control in developing countries, pp. 237–72. Oxford, Oxford University Press.
  • Chinhema, M, Brophy, T, Brown, M, Leibbrandt, M, Mlatsheni, C & Woolard, I, 2016. National Income Dynamics Study Panel User Manual.
  • Coats, RM, 1995. A note on estimating cross-border effects of state cigarette taxes. National Tax Journal 48(4), 573–84.
  • Ezzati, M & Lopez, AD, 2003. Estimates of global mortality attributable to smoking in 2000. The Lancet 362(9387), 847–52.
  • Guindon, GE, Paraje, GR & Chaloupka, FJ, 2016. The impact of prices and taxes on the use of tobacco products in Latin America and the Caribbean. Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública 40(4), 272–84.
  • Heckley, G, Jarl, J & Gerdtham, U-G, 2017. Frequency and intensity of alcohol consumption: new evidence from Sweden. The European Journal of Health Economics 18(4), 495–517.
  • Heckman, JJ, 1979. Sample selection bias as a specification error. Econometrica 47(1), 153–61.
  • Huang, B-N & Yang, C-W, 2006. Demand for cigarettes revisited: an application of the threshold regression model. Agricultural Economics 34(1), 81–6.
  • Huang, B-N, Yang, C-w, Hwang, M-j, et al., 2004. New evidence on demand for cigarettes: a panel data approach. International Journal of Applied Economics 1(1), 81–97.
  • International Agency for Research on Cancer, 2011. IARC hand-books of cancer prevention in tobacco control, Volume 14: Effectiveness of price and tax policies for control of tobacco. Lyon, France, International Agency for Research on Cancer.
  • Jha, P & Peto, R, 2014. Global effects of smoking, of quitting, and of taxing tobacco. New England Journal of Medicine 370(1), 60–8.
  • Koch, SF, 2018. Quasi-experimental evidence on tobacco tax regressivity. Social Science & Medicine 196, 19–28.
  • Ku, L-JE, Stearns, SC, Van Houtven, CH, Lee, S-YD, Dilworth-Anderson, P & Konrad, TR, 2013. Impact of caring for grandchildren on the health of grandparents in Taiwan. The Journals of Gerontology Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences 68(6), 1009–21.
  • Linegar, DJ & van Walbeek, C, 2017. The effect of excise tax increases on cigarette prices in South Africa, Tobacco Control pp. Tobacco control–2016.
  • Malan, M & Leaver, R, 2003. Political change in South Africa: new tobacco control and public health policies. In Beyer de, J & Brigden, W (Eds.), Tobacco control policy: strategies, successes & setbacks. Washington and Ottawa, World Bank and Research for international Tobacco Control, pp. 121–53. Chapter 6.
  • Mukong, AK, 2017. Peer networks and tobacco consumption in South Africa. South African Journal of Economics 85(3), 341–67.
  • Mukong, AK, Van Walbeek, C, Ross, H, 2017. Lifestyle and income-related inequality in health in South Africa. International Journal for Equity in Health 16(103), 1–14.
  • NCI, 2016. The economics of tobacco and tobacco control. National cancer institute tobacco control monograph 21., Technical report, NIH Publication No. 16-CA-8029A. Bethesda, MD: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health, National Cancer Institute; and Geneva, CH: World Health Organization.
  • Plümper, T & Troeger, VE, 2007. Efficient estimation of time-invariant and rarely changing variables in finite sample panel analyses with unit fixed effects. Political Analysis 15(2), 124–39.
  • Reekie, WD, 1994. Consumers’ surplus and the demand for cigarettes. Managerial and Decision Economics 15(3), 223–34.
  • Rezayatmand, R, Groot, W & Pavlova, M, 2017. Smoking behaviour and health care costs coverage: a European cross-country comparison. International Journal of Health Economics and Management 17(4), 453–71.
  • USDOHS, et al., 2014, The health consequences of smoking 50 years of progress: a report of the surgeon general, Atlanta, GA: US Department of Health and Human Services (DOHS), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Office on Smoking and Health 17.
  • Vallejo-Torres, L & Morris, S, 2010. The contribution of smoking and obesity to income-related inequalities in health in England. Social Science & Medicine 71(6), 1189–98.
  • Van der Merwe, R & Annett, N, 1998. The effects of taxation on consumption in South Africa, The Economics of Tobacco Control in South Africa. Report submitted to the International Tobacco Initiative.
  • Van Walbeek, CP, 1996. Excise taxes on tobacco: how much scope does the government have? South African Journal of Economics 64, 20–42.
  • Van Walbeek, C, 2000. Impact of the recent tobacco excise tax increases on the future government revenue potential in South Africa, Economics of Tobacco Control Project.
  • van Walbeek, C, 2015. The economics of tobacco control (part 2): evidence from the ITC project.
  • Vellios, N & van Walbeek, C, 2016. Determinants of regular smoking onset in South Africa using duration analysis. BMJ Open 6(7), e011076.
  • Warner, KE, 1990. Tobacco taxation as health policy in the third world. American Journal of Public Health 80(5), 529–31.
  • Wooldridge, JM, 2010. Econometric analysis of cross section and panel data. Cambridge, MA, MIT Press.
  • Yurekli, AA & Zhang, P, 2000. The impact of clean indoor-air laws and cigarette smuggling on demand for cigarettes: an empirical model. Health Economics 9(2), 159–70.

Reprints and Corporate Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

To request a reprint or corporate permissions for this article, please click on the relevant link below:

Academic Permissions

Please note: Selecting permissions does not provide access to the full text of the article, please see our help page How do I view content?

Obtain permissions instantly via Rightslink by clicking on the button below:

If you are unable to obtain permissions via Rightslink, please complete and submit this Permissions form. For more information, please visit our Permissions help page.