University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture, Knoxville, Tennessee, USA.
USDA Economic Research Service, Washington, DC, USA.
BMJ Open. 2019 Aug 8;9(8):e026390. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026390.
To quantify global relationships between sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) intake and prices and examine the potential effectiveness of tax policy.
SSB intake data by country, age and sex from the Global Dietary Database were combined with gross domestic product and price data from the World Bank. Intake responsiveness to income and prices was estimated accounting for national income, age and sex differences.
164 countries.
Full adult population in each country.
A consumer demand modelling framework was used to estimate the relationship between SSB intake and prices and derive own-price elasticities (measures of percentage changes in intake from a 1% price change) globally by age and sex. We simulated how a 20% tax would impact SSB intake globally. Tax policy outcomes were examined across countries by global income decile for representative age and sex subgroups.
Own-price responsiveness was highest in lowest income countries, ranging from -0.70 (p<0.100) for women, age 50, to -1.91 (p<0.001) for men, age 80. In the highest income countries, responsiveness was as high as -0.49 (p<0.001) (men, age 20), but was mostly insignificant for older adults. Overall, elasticities were strongest (more negative) at the youngest and oldest age groups, and mostly insignificant for middle-aged adults, particularly in middle-income and high-income countries. Sex differences were mostly negligible. Potential intake reductions from a 20% tax in lowest income countries ranged from 14.5% (95% CI: 29.5%, -0.4%) in women, 35 ≤ age < 60, to 24.9% (44.4%, 5.3%) in men, age ≥60. Intake reductions decreased with country income overall, and were mostly insignificant for middle-aged adults.
These findings estimate the global price-responsiveness of SSB intake by age and sex, informing ongoing policy discussions on potential effects of taxes.
量化全球含糖饮料(SSB)摄入量与价格之间的关系,并研究税收政策的潜在效果。
将全球饮食数据库中的国家、年龄和性别特定的 SSB 摄入量数据与世界银行的国内生产总值和价格数据相结合。考虑到国家收入、年龄和性别差异,估计了对收入和价格的摄入量反应。
164 个国家。
每个国家的全部成年人口。
使用消费者需求建模框架估计 SSB 摄入量与价格之间的关系,并根据年龄和性别在全球范围内得出自价格弹性(价格变化 1%时摄入量的百分比变化)。我们模拟了 20%的税将如何影响全球的 SSB 摄入量。通过代表性年龄和性别子组的全球收入十分位数,在国家间检查税收政策的结果。
最低收入国家的自价格反应性最高,从 50 岁女性的-0.70(p<0.100)到 80 岁男性的-1.91(p<0.001)不等。在最高收入国家,反应性高达-0.49(p<0.001)(20 岁男性),但对老年人大多不显著。总体而言,弹性在最年轻和最年长的年龄组最强(更负),对中年成年人大多不显著,特别是在中等收入和高收入国家。性别差异大多可以忽略不计。在最低收入国家,20%的税收可能会使摄入量减少 14.5%(95%CI:29.5%,-0.4%)(35 岁≤年龄<60 岁女性)至 24.9%(44.4%,5.3%)(60 岁以上男性)。总体而言,摄入量的减少随着国家收入的增加而减少,对中年成年人的影响大多不显著。
这些发现估计了 SSB 摄入量的全球价格反应性,按年龄和性别划分,为正在进行的关于税收潜在影响的政策讨论提供了信息。