Silver Lynn D, Ng Shu Wen, Ryan-Ibarra Suzanne, Taillie Lindsey Smith, Induni Marta, Miles Donna R, Poti Jennifer M, Popkin Barry M
Public Health Institute, Oakland, California, United States of America.
Department of Nutrition, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2017 Apr 18;14(4):e1002283. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002283. eCollection 2017 Apr.
Taxes on sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) meant to improve health and raise revenue are being adopted, yet evaluation is scarce. This study examines the association of the first penny per ounce SSB excise tax in the United States, in Berkeley, California, with beverage prices, sales, store revenue/consumer spending, and usual beverage intake.
Methods included comparison of pre-taxation (before 1 January 2015) and first-year post-taxation (1 March 2015-29 February 2016) measures of (1) beverage prices at 26 Berkeley stores; (2) point-of-sale scanner data on 15.5 million checkouts for beverage prices, sales, and store revenue for two supermarket chains covering three Berkeley and six control non-Berkeley large supermarkets in adjacent cities; and (3) a representative telephone survey (17.4% cooperation rate) of 957 adult Berkeley residents. Key hypotheses were that (1) the tax would be passed through to the prices of taxed beverages among the chain stores in which Berkeley implemented the tax in 2015; (2) sales of taxed beverages would decline, and sales of untaxed beverages would rise, in Berkeley stores more than in comparison non-Berkeley stores; (3) consumer spending per transaction (checkout episode) would not increase in Berkeley stores; and (4) self-reported consumption of taxed beverages would decline. Main outcomes and measures included changes in inflation-adjusted prices (cents/ounce), beverage sales (ounces), consumers' spending measured as store revenue (inflation-adjusted dollars per transaction) in two large chains, and usual beverage intake (grams/day and kilocalories/day). Tax pass-through (changes in the price after imposition of the tax) for SSBs varied in degree and timing by store type and beverage type. Pass-through was complete in large chain supermarkets (+1.07¢/oz, p = 0.001) and small chain supermarkets and chain gas stations (1.31¢/oz, p = 0.004), partial in pharmacies (+0.45¢/oz, p = 0.03), and negative in independent corner stores and independent gas stations (-0.64¢/oz, p = 0.004). Sales-unweighted mean price change from scanner data was +0.67¢/oz (p = 0.00) (sales-weighted, +0.65¢/oz, p = 0.003), with +1.09¢/oz (p < 0.001) for sodas and energy drinks, but a lower change in other categories. Post-tax year 1 scanner data SSB sales (ounces/transaction) in Berkeley stores declined 9.6% (p < 0.001) compared to estimates if the tax were not in place, but rose 6.9% (p < 0.001) for non-Berkeley stores. Sales of untaxed beverages in Berkeley stores rose by 3.5% versus 0.5% (both p < 0.001) for non-Berkeley stores. Overall beverage sales also rose across stores. In Berkeley, sales of water rose by 15.6% (p < 0.001) (exceeding the decline in SSB sales in ounces); untaxed fruit, vegetable, and tea drinks, by 4.37% (p < 0.001); and plain milk, by 0.63% (p = 0.01). Scanner data mean store revenue/consumer spending (dollars per transaction) fell 18¢ less in Berkeley (-$0.36, p < 0.001) than in comparison stores (-$0.54, p < 0.001). Baseline and post-tax Berkeley SSB sales and usual dietary intake were markedly low compared to national levels (at baseline, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey SSB intake nationally was 131 kcal/d and in Berkeley was 45 kcal/d). Reductions in self-reported mean daily SSB intake in grams (-19.8%, p = 0.49) and in mean per capita SSB caloric intake (-13.3%, p = 0.56) from baseline to post-tax were not statistically significant. Limitations of the study include inability to establish causal links due to observational design, and the absence of health outcomes. Analysis of consumption was limited by the small effect size in relation to high standard error and Berkeley's low baseline consumption.
One year following implementation of the nation's first large SSB tax, prices of SSBs increased in many, but not all, settings, SSB sales declined, and sales of untaxed beverages (especially water) and overall study beverages rose in Berkeley; overall consumer spending per transaction in the stores studied did not rise. Price increases for SSBs in two distinct data sources, their timing, and the patterns of change in taxed and untaxed beverage sales suggest that the observed changes may be attributable to the tax. Post-tax self-reported SSB intake did not change significantly compared to baseline. Significant declines in SSB sales, even in this relatively affluent community, accompanied by revenue used for prevention suggest promise for this policy. Evaluation of taxation in jurisdictions with more typical SSB consumption, with controls, is needed to assess broader dietary and potential health impacts.
旨在改善健康状况并增加财政收入的含糖饮料税正在被采用,但相关评估却很匮乏。本研究考察了美国加利福尼亚州伯克利市每盎司一美分的含糖饮料消费税与饮料价格、销量、商店收入/消费者支出以及日常饮料摄入量之间的关联。
方法包括比较征税前(2015年1月1日前)和征税后第一年(2015年3月1日至2016年2月29日)的以下各项指标:(1)伯克利市26家商店的饮料价格;(2)两家连锁超市1550万笔交易的销售点扫描数据,这两家连锁超市包括伯克利市的三家以及相邻城市六家作为对照的非伯克利市大型超市,数据涉及饮料价格、销量和商店收入;(3)对957名伯克利市成年居民进行的具有代表性的电话调查(合作率为17.4%)。主要假设为:(1)该税将转嫁给2015年伯克利市实施征税的连锁商店中应税饮料的价格;(2)伯克利市商店中应税饮料的销量将下降,非应税饮料的销量将上升,且伯克利市商店的变化幅度大于对照的非伯克利市商店;(3)伯克利市商店每笔交易(每次结账)的消费者支出不会增加;(4)自我报告的应税饮料消费量将下降。主要结局和指标包括经通胀调整后的价格变化(美分/盎司)、饮料销量(盎司), 两家大型连锁超市中以商店收入衡量的消费者支出(经通胀调整后的美元/交易)以及日常饮料摄入量(克/天和千卡/天)。含糖饮料税的税负转嫁(征税后价格的变化)因商店类型和饮料类型而异,程度和时间各不相同。在大型连锁超市中税负转嫁完全实现(+1.07美分/盎司,p = 0.001),在小型连锁超市和连锁加油站中为1.31美分/盎司(p = 0.004),在药店中部分实现(+0.45美分/盎司,p = 0.03),而在独立街角商店和独立加油站中则为负(-0.64美分/盎司,p = 0.004)。根据扫描数据得出的未加权平均价格变化为+0.67美分/盎司(p = 0.00)(加权后为+0.65美分/盎司,p = 0.003),其中汽水和能量饮料为+1.09美分/盎司(p < 0.001),但其他类别变化较小。与假设未征税时的估计值相比,征税后第一年扫描数据显示,伯克利市商店中含糖饮料的销量(盎司/交易)下降了9.6%(p < 0.001),而非伯克利市商店上升了6.9%(p < 0.