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The economic impact of Mexico City's smoke-free law
  1. Carlos Manuel Guerrero López1,
  2. Jorge Alberto Jiménez Ruiz1,
  3. Luz Myriam Reynales Shigematsu1,
  4. Hugh R Waters2
  1. 1Department for Tobacco Research, Population Health Research Center, National Institute for Public Health, Cuernavaca, Morelos, Mexico, USA
  2. 2Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA
  1. Correspondence to Dr Hugh R Waters, Departments of Health Policy and Management and Health, Behavior, and Society, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Rand Health, 1776 Main Street, Room 4369, Santa Monica, CA 90401-3208, USA; waters{at}rand.org

Abstract

Objective To evaluate the economic impact of Mexico City's 2008 smoke-free law—The Non-Smokers' Health Protection Law on restaurants, bars and nightclubs.

Material and methods We used the Monthly Services Survey of businesses from January 2005 to April 2009—with revenues, employment and payments to employees as the principal outcomes. The results are estimated using a differences-in-differences regression model with fixed effects. The states of Jalisco, Nuevo León and México, where the law was not in effect, serve as a counterfactual comparison group.

Results In restaurants, after accounting for observable factors and the fixed effects, there was a 24.8% increase in restaurants' revenue associated with the smoke-free law. This difference is not statistically significant but shows that, on average, restaurants did not suffer economically as a result of the law. Total wages increased by 28.2% and employment increased by 16.2%. In nightclubs, bars and taverns there was a decrease of 1.5% in revenues and an increase of 0.1% and 3.0%, respectively, in wages and employment. None of these effects are statistically significant in multivariate analysis.

Conclusions There is no statistically significant evidence that the Mexico City smoke-free law had a negative impact on restaurants' income, employees' wages and levels of employment. On the contrary, the results show a positive, though statistically non-significant, impact of the law on most of these outcomes. Mexico City's experience suggests that smoke-free laws in Mexico and elsewhere will not hurt economic productivity in the restaurant and bar industries.

  • Tobacco control
  • smoke-free laws
  • economic evaluation
  • Mexico
  • econometrics
  • economics
  • environmental tobacco smoke
  • public policy

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Footnotes

  • Funding This study was supported by the Bloomberg Global Initiative to Reducing Tobacco Use. The authors are grateful for the collaboration of officials of the Mexican National Institute for Statistics and Geography (INEGI) and specifically Eng Ramón Bravo Zepeda, Deputy Director of Surveys and Services in the General Direction of Economic Statistics; Eng Juan José Ríos Franco, Director of Statistics for the Tertiary Sector; and Lic Jorge Alberto Reyes Moreno, Adjunct Director for Economic Surveys and Administrative Registration. We are also grateful for constructive comments from two external reviewers.

  • Competing interests None.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.