Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7363580 | Journal of Health Economics | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The estimation of price elasticities of alcohol demand is valuable for the appraisal of price-based policy interventions such as minimum unit pricing and taxation. This study applies a pseudo-panel approach to the cross-sectional Living Cost and Food Survey 2001/2-2009 to estimate the own- and cross-price elasticities of off- and on-trade beer, cider, wine, spirits and ready-to-drinks in the UK. A pseudo-panel with 72 subgroups defined by birth year, gender and socioeconomic status is constructed. Estimated own-price elasticities from the base case fixed effect models are all negative and mostly statically significant (p < 0.05). Off-trade cider and beer are most elastic (â1.27 and â0.98) and off-trade spirits and on-trade ready-to-drinks are least elastic (â0.08 and â0.19). Estimated cross-price elasticities are smaller in magnitude with a mix of positive and negative signs. The results appear plausible and robust and could be used for appraising the estimated impact of price-based interventions in the UK.
Related Topics
Health Sciences
Medicine and Dentistry
Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
Yang Meng, Alan Brennan, Robin Purshouse, Daniel Hill-McManus, Colin Angus, John Holmes, Petra Sylvia Meier,