Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10476644 | Journal of Health Economics | 2005 | 23 Pages |
Abstract
We provide a description of health-related incentives faced by a rational smoker by considering the role of perception in both immediate quality-of-life effects of smoking and future risk of mortality. A person who adapts psychologically to a lowered health state, smokes more early in life and shifts demands for health investments and health-complementary activities later in life. He also smokes more in total. Someone aware of the full mortality consequences of smoking, smokes less and demands less medical care than someone who believes that these effects are highly reversible. The impacts of new information on mortality risk are most valuable early in life. Lastly, someone endowed with a longer life expectancy smokes more in the first part of life but conditional on access to medical care.
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Authors
Jared C. Carbone, Snorre Kverndokk, Ole Jørgen Røgeberg,