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Are lower income smokers more price sensitive?: the evidence from Korean cigarette tax increases
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  1. Seng Eun Choi
  1. Correspondence to Dr Seng Eun Choi, Department of Government Expenditure, Korea Institute for Public Finance, 79-6 Garak-dong, Songpa-gu, Seoul, Korea; sechoi{at}kipf.re.kr

Abstract

Background The cigarette excise taxes and the price of a typical pack of cigarettes in Korea have not increased since 2005, and effective tax rate as a fraction of price and real price of cigarettes have both been falling. As smoking prevalence is higher among lower income people than among higher income people in Korea, the regressivity of cigarette excise taxes is often cited as a barrier to tobacco tax and price policy. While studies in several other high-income countries have shown that higher income individuals are less price sensitive, few studies have examined the differential impact of cigarette tax increases by income group in Korea. Most of the Korean literature has estimated the demand for cigarettes using time-series aggregate sales data or household level survey data, which record household cigarette expenditures rather than individual cigarette consumption. Studies using survey data often lack time-series variation and estimate cigarette demand using household expenditure data, while studies using time-series aggregate sales data lack cross-sectional variation.

Objective I examine differences in the effects of cigarette price on the cigarette consumption of various income groups using individual-level cigarette consumption records from the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KHNNES). I also analyse the implications of cigarette taxes and price increases on the relative tax burdens of different income groups.

Design I use pooled data from the KNHNES for the 1998–2011 period to estimate the price elasticity of cigarette consumption of four income groups. Treating cigarette consumption as a latent variable, I employ an econometric procedure that corrects for non-random sample selection, or the fact that some non-smokers might have smoked at a low enough price, and estimate the price elasticity of cigarette consumption by income group. The estimated price elasticities include the responsiveness of potential smokers as well as current smokers.

Results Lower income Korean smokers are more responsive to changes in the price of cigarettes. While the overall price elasticity of cigarettes is estimated to be −0.425, the price elasticity of the lowest income quartile is estimated to be −0.812, whereas that of the highest income quartile is estimated to be −0.325.

Conclusions The estimated price elasticities of different income groups imply that the cigarette tax and price increases in Korea would reduce smoking more in those with lower incomes. For a given price increase, the percentage reduction in cigarette consumption among smokers in the lowest income quartile is 2.5 times greater than among smokers in the top income quartile. The simulated tax burdens of different income groups show that the additional burden of a tax increase and the associated price rise is largely borne by higher income smokers.

  • Economics
  • Price
  • Taxation

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Introduction

The price of cigarettes in Korea is the lowest among Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries, while the prevalence of smoking in men is the highest among OECD countries.1 According to the Ministry of Health and Welfare Statistical Yearbook, the prevalence of smoking in men decreased from 67% in 1998 to 45.1% in 2007, but has slightly increased to 46.8% since 2007.2 The price of cigarettes in Korea were increased only six times during the past 25 years: the price of a typical pack of 20 cigarettes was 900 won in 1994 and was raised to the current price of 2500 won in 2005. Accounting for inflation, a pack of 2500 won in 2014 is equivalent to 2000 won in 2005.

Korea imposes a local government excise tax of 641 won (equivalent to US$0.6), a local education tax amounting to 50% of the local government excise tax, an earmarked excise tax of 354 won, 10% value added tax and waste disposal tax of 7 won on 20 cigarettes. Total tax on a typical pack of cigarettes is 1550 won, amounting to 62% of the price of a pack of cigarettes. Local government excise tax was raised twice from 461 won to the current level of 641 won and local education tax was introduced in 1996. An earmarked excise tax was introduced in 1997 as a source of revenue for the National Health Promotion Fund.

The cigarette manufacturing industry in Korea was previously a government-owned monopoly, and the price of a typical pack of cigarettes was set by the government until Korea Tomorrow and Global (KT&G) was finally privatised in 2002. Following privatisation of KT&G and price deregulation, however, the long tradition of cigarette price regulation has largely persisted. As a consequence, although premium cigarette brands were being introduced with high prices, the price of a typical pack of cigarettes has not changed, given the absence of cigarette tax changes. Raising cigarette excise taxes and price is frequently considered as a tobacco control policy to reduce smoking prevalence and also as an additional revenue source for financing welfare expenditures.

One of the main arguments associated with cigarette tax increases in Korea is that cigarette excise taxes are regressive. Product taxes on most goods, excluding luxury goods, are typically considered regressive because the ratio of consumption expenditures to income is greater among the poor than among the wealthy. The regressivity of cigarette excise taxes is compounded by the fact that the poor in many countries generally smoke more than the rich, so that cigarette taxes fall disproportionately on the poor. This is also true of Korea: in 2011, smoking prevalence among adults in the lowest income quartile was 30.8%, while that among adults in the highest income quartile was 24.1%. However, an important argument to counter concerns of regressivity is that the additional tax burden associated with tax increases may be less for lower income groups if they are more responsive to cigarette price increases than higher income individuals. Increases in cigarette taxes and price may reduce the regressivity of existing cigarette taxes, depending on the price elasticities of different income groups.

The empirical questions of how responsive cigarette consumption is to price changes and how responses would vary by income groups are important to the estimation of the effectiveness of tobacco tax and price policy for tobacco control and tax revenue. While previous studies of the price elasticity of cigarette consumption in Korea reports various magnitudes of elasticity for the aggregate population, depending on the data and econometric estimation strategies used, few studies have examined the price elasticity by income groups.3–9

The paper estimates the differential responsiveness of cigarette consumption to price changes for income groups by using the Korea National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHNES), which reports official national smoking-related statistics. KNHNES is an individual level survey data with information on individual-level cigarette consumption and varied smoking-related information, such as the duration of smoking, cessation of smoking and past smoking experience. Pooling the survey data across years provides time-series as well as cross-sectional variation in smoking habits of individual smokers.

Previous literature

Previous studies of the price elasticity of cigarettes have generally found that the demand for cigarettes is price inelastic.10–13 Gallet and List14 reviewed 500 studies and concluded that the price elasticity of cigarettes is −0.4 to −0.44. The demand for cigarettes is found to be more price-responsive in low-income countries, low-income smokers and younger smokers. Most of these studies have estimated the price elasticity of −0.25 to −0.5 for high-income countries.15 For low-income and middle-income countries, the price elasticity is estimated to range from −0.5 to −1. A recent extensive survey of the literature has found estimates of overall price elasticity to range from −0.2 to −0.66 for high-income countries, and from −0.154 to −1.62 for low-income and middle-income countries.16 While lower income groups are consistently found to be more responsive to cigarette price increases in high-income countries, this is not always the case in low-income and middle-income countries.

Korean studies have also produced estimates of the price elasticity of cigarette demand that range from −0.19 to −0.77. Most studies of the price elasticity of cigarettes in Korea have used aggregate time-series sales data3–5 and Household Expenditure and Income Survey data.3–9 Studies based on aggregate data have estimated price elasticities ranging from −0.24 to −0.47, and studies based on survey data have estimated price elasticities ranging from −0.19 to −0.77.

It is well recognised that aggregate time-series data suffer from multicollinearity problems and simultaneity problems that introduce statistical biases in the estimate of price elasticity. Aggregate time-series data also lack information on individual decision-making.17 Individual-level data provide more information on smoking prevalence, cessation decisions and the effect of addiction. Previous studies of cigarette consumption in Korea have used the Household Expenditure and Income Survey, which provides long time-series spans as well as cross-sectional information; that survey, however, only records household expenditures on cigarettes rather than individual quantities of cigarettes consumed.

In addition to limitations in previously used data sources, most Korean studies have not fully examined the effect of the most conspicuous price increases in 2005. Among the six price increases from 1996 to the present, the price increases in 2004 and 2005 were very steep compared with the earlier price increases. The price per pack of 20 cigarettes was 1500 won before December 2004, when it rose to 2000 won. After 1 month, the price became 2500 won on January 2005 (see figure 1). In only 2 months, cigarette pack price rose from 1500 won to 2500 won. The four prior price increases in the 1990s and in 2002 involved much smaller increases of 100 won to 200 won. Earlier studies of Korean cigarette demand primarily analysed the 1990s and early 2000s, and the most recent studies examined data through 2006.

Figure 1

Cigarette excise taxes and cigarette prices in Korea.

Data and variable descriptions

The paper uses individual smoking-related records in the KNHNES. The survey was conducted every 3 years from 1998 to 2007, and it was changed to an annual survey in 2007. Although they are not panel data, repeated cross-sectional data provide sufficient time variation and cross-sectional variation. The survey records the age that individuals began smoking, their motivation for smoking, average cigarette consumption per day of current smokers and ex-smokers, the duration of smoking, the date that former smokers quit smoking, the motivation to quit and other information. I use a pooled sample of the 1998, 2001, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009 and 2010 waves of the KNHNES to analyse the impact of the most significant price increases that occurred after 2001. The strength of the data lies in the fact that they consist of individual cigarette consumption data, while much of the literature uses household expenditure data. The survey asks about average daily cigarette consumption. In addition, the survey includes more recent time-series information than most previous studies, which employ data from the early 2000s when the major price changes had not yet occurred. In the present analysis, the price of a typical pack of 20 cigarettes is deflated using the Consumer Price Index (CPI) with a base year of 1998 to arrive at real cigarette prices.

Table 1 describes the summary statistics of the pooled sample. The sample consists of 28% smokers and 72% non-smokers. Approximately 25% of the non-smokers responded that they were once smokers but had since quit smoking. On average, the non-smokers have higher household income and are older. Most smokers are male, only 12% of smokers are female. Single and divorced individuals are slightly more likely to smoke. The average duration of smoking is 21 years, and the average consumption of tobacco is approximately 16 packs per month.

Table 1

Summary statistics*

Empirical model and estimated results

The pooled sample consists of 28% smokers and 72% non-smokers. A well-recognised econometric problem with consumption data is the non-random selection of smokers into the sample. Prices and consumption are only observed for current smokers, whereas the entire sample in a given year will also have individuals who, if the prices were lower, might actually smoke. The result of this is that elasticity estimates that use only data on smokers will be biased towards zero, that is, will tend to find less responsiveness to price. I use Heckman's two-stage estimation to determine the price elasticity of cigarette consumption and correct for sample selection bias. Heckman's procedure splits the price-consumption relation into two separate stages: first, the process that determines selection into the sample of smokers, that is, the decision to smoke or not smoke based on a set of latent variables, and second, the number of cigarettes smoked conditional on being a smoker. The empirical model for all income groups consists of the following equations:Embedded Image 1Embedded Image 2where Yit is the natural log of the amount of individual cigarette consumption per day, and Xit is a vector of variables including age, age squared, female, rural area, single, divorced, widowed, elementary school, middle school, college, no jobs, white-collar, service and sales, agriculture and fisheries, construction, duration of smoking, log real cigarette price per pack of 20 cigarettes and log income. Zit in the equation (2) (the selection equation to predict whether an individual is a smoker) includes age, age squared, female, rural area, marital status, education, job and real price. With the inclusion of duration in the smoking variable, the addictive nature of smoking is reflected in the estimation of the demand equation. This basic econometric model is used to estimate the price elasticity of cigarette consumption for four income groups.

The first stage estimation of decisions to smoke and the second stage estimation of cigarette demand have several implications for smoking prevalence among different socioeconomic groups (see table 2). The dependent variables are a dummy variable for smoking in the first stage estimation (selection equation) and the amount of cigarette consumption per day in the second stage estimation. As with the decision to smoke, the number of cigarettes smoked increases with age. Females, residents of rural areas, single people, and divorced and widowed individuals are less likely to smoke, and smoke smaller amounts than the excluded categories (males and married). More educated and higher income individuals are less likely to smoke and consume fewer cigarettes per day than less educated and lower income individuals. Those who have been smoking for a long time tend to smoke more cigarettes than those who began smoking recently. Price negatively affects smoking participation and the quantity of cigarette consumption. The overall estimated price elasticity of cigarettes is −0.425. Simple ordinary least squares underestimates the price elasticity of cigarette consumption; the estimated price elasticity without correcting sample selection bias is −0.26.

Table 2

Estimation results for the cigarette demand equation

Differences in price elasticity by income quartiles

To examine whether the price elasticity of the lower income group is lower than that of higher income group, I estimate the cigarette demand equation by four quartiles. The second stage estimation in table 2 is repeated for each of the four income groupings, and the results are presented in table 3. The price elasticity of the lower income quartiles tends to be larger in absolute terms than that of the higher income quartiles. The price elasticity of the first income quartile is estimated to be −0.812, which is significantly larger in absolute terms than that of the total sample, which is −0.425. The price elasticity of the second, third and top income quartiles is −0.572, −0.325 and −0.341, respectively. One concern with these elasticity estimates is the possibility of bias if price increases induce smuggling, in which case demand may be affected by substitution of illegal tobacco products.18 ,19 However, this type of bias is not likely to be large in the case of Korean cigarette demand, since smuggling and substitution of illegal tobacco products is much more limited in Korea than in the USA or European countries.

Table 3

Responsiveness of number of cigarettes smoked by income groups (the second stage estimation results)

Discussion

Differences in consumption and revenue impact of price increases by income quartiles

Policymakers are often interested in the benefits and relative burdens of policy changes on socioeconomic groups. The results above suggest that lower income Koreans as a group are more responsive to changes in cigarette price than higher income Koreans. Taken together with the fact that lower income Koreans also have a higher smoking prevalence, the finding that lower income smokers cut back on smoking more than higher income smokers implies that the additional tax revenue from cigarette tax increases mostly comes from higher income groups as a whole. Table 4 presents the simulated consequences of alternative cigarette price increases for each of the income groups. The additional tax burdens are primarily borne by the higher income group because higher income people reduce cigarette consumption less in response to price increases than do lower income people. With modest price increases, the tax burden for lower income people rises, but the increase in the tax burden for lower income people is small relative to that for higher income people. A 100% increase in price would reduce total consumption by 42.5% and raise over 261 billion won. While all income groups reduce consumption, the revenue increase would primarily come from the top half of the income distribution, while consumption reductions in the lowest quartile would result in their tax spending 83 billion won less on cigarettes. More generally, when the cigarette tax and thus the price of cigarettes increases, the relative tax burdens of high-income and low-income groups change with the tax burden for higher income people rising more than the tax burden for lower income people.

Table 4

Simulation on the effects of cigarette price increases (0.1 million packs, 0.1 million won)

Conclusion

The paper has examined the differential effects of changes in cigarette price on the smoking habits of various income groups in Korea using individual-level cigarette consumption data from the KHNNES. The overall price elasticity of cigarette consumption is estimated to be −0.425. Cigarette consumption is found to be more price-elastic for lower income than for higher income groups, for a given cigarette price increase in Korea. Smokers in the lowest income quartile reduce consumptions at a rate 2.5 times greater than Korean smokers in the top income quartile. The findings of this paper are consistent with evidence from other high-income countries, implying that cigarette tax and price increases will tend to have a relatively larger impact in improving health outcomes of the poorest Koreans.20 ,21

Given the higher smoking prevalence and the higher share of cigarette expenditure of the poor compared with the rich, cigarette excise taxes tend to be regressive. However, these finding of a higher responsiveness to price changes among lower income individuals implies that the regressivity of cigarette taxes can be reduced through a tax increase. Simulations of the consequences of cigarette price increases show that, for any given change in cigarette taxes and price, the tax burden on lower income people declines relative to that on higher income people.

What this paper adds

  • Taxes on cigarettes are generally known to be regressive, given the higher smoking prevalence and the higher share of cigarette expenditure of lower income groups. However, the regressivity of cigarette taxes can be reduced through a tax increase, if lower income smokers are more price-sensitive than higher income smokers.

  • This paper provides new evidence on reduced regressivity of cigarette tax through a tax increase by analysing the patterns of price elasticity of cigarette consumption of different income groups in Korea. In particular, in Korea, lower income smokers respond more strongly than higher income smokers to cigarette price increases, and reduce their cigarette consumption more.

  • The tax burden on lower income Korean smokers declines relative to that on higher income smokers, implying that the cigarette tax can be less regressive through a tax increase in Korea.

Acknowledgments

This paper is rewritten based on the KIPF research paper on the fiscal effect of tobacco taxation. Seok Jin Woo and Hee Cheol Min gave useful comments on the paper.

References

Footnotes

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