School of Medicine, Griffith University, Meadowbrook, QLD, Australia.
Appl Health Econ Health Policy. 2012 Jan 1;10(1):37-49. doi: 10.2165/11594850-000000000-00000.
In Australia and elsewhere, fiscal measures such as alcohol taxation are a commonly used intervention and cost-effective strategy to reduce alcohol consumption and associated harm. However, alcohol taxation policies distort the market for alcohol, specifically increasing the marginal cost of alcohol. It is proposed that a volumetric tax, which taxes alcohol equally across all beverage types, is less distortive of consumer preferences and more efficient at reducing alcohol consumption than the current Australian tax model, where taxes are charged at varying amounts per litre of pure alcohol, depending on the beverage type.
This paper quantifies the effect of four different alcohol taxation systems, relative to the current Australian system: two different types of volumetric taxation (deadweight loss neutral and tax revenue neutral); the recent strategy trialled in Australia of increasing the tax only on ready-to-drink alcoholic beverages (i.e. premixed spirits); and a tiered tax system, which may be more politically acceptable.
A partial equilibrium approach was used to measure taxation revenue, consumer welfare and consumption in alcohol markets. Estimates of taxation revenue, consumer welfare and consumption were first calculated for 2008 and then compared with the four scenarios considered.
Relative to the previous alcohol taxation scheme in Australia, the taxation strategy that increased the tax solely on ready-to-drink alcoholic beverages increased taxation revenue by 479 million Australian dollars ($A), reduced pure alcohol consumption by 754 000 litres and increased the net deadweight loss of taxation by $A62 million. For a tax-neutral approach, for the same level of taxation revenue as is currently generated, a volumetric tax could substantially reduce the cost of taxation (as described by the net loss in consumer welfare) by $A177 million and reduce pure alcohol consumption by 4 68 000 litres. Under a deadweight loss-neutral scenario, for the same amount of deadweight loss generated from the previous taxation scenario, taxation revenue could be increased by $A1153 million, in addition to reducing pure alcohol consumption by 4 316 000 litres. A tiered taxation regime, as modelled here, could decrease pure alcohol consumption by 2 616 000 litres whilst increasing taxation revenue by $A1101 million. However, this scenario would also increase the deadweight loss of taxation by $A113 million.
From these scenarios, it can be shown that, for the same tax revenue, consumer welfare can be reduced or, for the same level of loss to consumer welfare, taxation revenue can be increased. Both these scenarios result in a reduction of pure alcohol consumption.
在澳大利亚和其他地方,财政措施(如酒类征税)是一种常用的干预手段和具有成本效益的策略,可用于减少酒精消费和相关危害。然而,酒类征税政策会扭曲酒类市场,特别是会提高酒类的边际成本。有人提议,采用等容税,即对所有酒类类型等量征税,这种方式对消费者偏好的扭曲程度较小,而且比澳大利亚现行的酒类征税模式更能有效减少酒类消费,因为现行模式是根据酒类类型,按每升纯酒精的不同数量征税。
本文定量分析了四种不同酒类征税制度相对于澳大利亚现行制度的效果:两种不同类型的等容税(无无谓损失中性和税收中性);澳大利亚最近试行的仅对即饮酒精饮料(即预调酒)提高税收的策略;以及一种可能更具政治可接受性的分级征税制度。
采用局部均衡方法来衡量酒类市场的税收收入、消费者福利和消费。首先估算 2008 年的税收收入、消费者福利和消费,然后将这些数据与所考虑的四个方案进行比较。
与澳大利亚之前的酒类征税方案相比,仅对即饮酒精饮料提高税收的征税策略增加了 4.79 亿澳元(AUD)的税收收入,减少了 754,000 升纯酒精消费,使税收的净无谓损失增加了 6200 万 AUD。对于税收中性方法,如果要达到目前的税收收入水平,等容税可以大幅降低税收成本(以消费者福利的净损失来衡量),减少 1.77 亿 AUD,并减少 46.80 万升纯酒精消费。在无无谓损失中性的情况下,在产生相同的无谓损失的情况下,通过之前的征税方案,可以将税收收入增加 1.153 亿 AUD,同时减少 431.6 万升纯酒精消费。如本文所述,分级征税制度可以减少 261.6 万升纯酒精消费,同时增加 1.101 亿 AUD 的税收收入。但是,这种情况也会使税收的无谓损失增加 1.13 亿 AUD。
从这些方案可以看出,在相同的税收收入下,可以降低消费者福利,或者在相同的消费者福利损失下,可以增加税收收入。这两种方案都导致了纯酒精消费的减少。