Dartanto Teguh, Moeis Faizal R, Can Canyon K, Ratih Suci P, Nurhasana Renny, Satrya Aryana, Thabrany Hasbullah
Department of Economics, Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia.
Institute for Economic and Social Research, Faculty of Economics and Business, Universitas Indonesia, Depok, Indonesia.
Tob Induc Dis. 2021 Apr 15;19:29. doi: 10.18332/tid/132966. eCollection 2021.
Social assistance programs create an income effect that allows low-income groups to raise their consumption to improve their well-being. However, this may unintentionally induce an increase in their consumption of temptation goods, including tobacco. By analyzing five massive social assistance programs distributed by the government since 2007, we explore whether those programs may induce increased smoking intensity in Indonesia.
This study is a quantitative study that applies a Tobit regression, Difference-in-Differences (DiD) regression, Difference regression, and two-sample t-test, using the 2017 Susenas (National Socioeconomic Survey) and the 2007 and 2014 Indonesia Family Life Survey. Estimations using sociodemographic, regional, and social assistance dummy variables are used to explore the impact of the programs on the intensity of cigarette consumption in Indonesia, simultaneously assessing the relationship between cigarette consumption and socioeconomic conditions.
Our estimations using Tobit regressions confirm that social assistance recipients consume 3.39 cigarettes per capita per week more than non-recipients. The DiD regressions on IFLS panel data show that social assistance programs significantly increase cigarette consumption by 2.8 cigarettes per capita per week. We also find that: 1) smokers have lower socioeconomic indicators than non-smokers in terms of nutrition and health and education expenditures, and 2) younger household members living with smokers have less educational attainment and higher average sick days.
There is reasonable evidence to support the hypothesis that social assistance programs in Indonesia have contributed to the greater intensity of tobacco consumption among the recipients. The findings call for policy reforms in social assistance programs to be warier with the eligibility conditions for social assistance recipients. Adding new conditions related to smoking behaviors might reduce the smoking intensity of those in low-income groups and, in the long run, might improve the effectiveness of social assistance programs in raising the socioeconomic welfare of the low-income population.
社会援助项目产生了一种收入效应,使低收入群体能够提高消费以改善其福祉。然而,这可能会无意中导致他们对包括烟草在内的诱惑性商品的消费增加。通过分析自2007年以来政府发放的五项大规模社会援助项目,我们探究这些项目是否可能导致印度尼西亚吸烟强度增加。
本研究是一项定量研究,运用了托比特回归、双重差分(DiD)回归、差分回归和双样本t检验,使用了2017年的Susenas(全国社会经济调查)以及2007年和2014年的印度尼西亚家庭生活调查。使用社会人口统计学、地区和社会援助虚拟变量进行估计,以探究这些项目对印度尼西亚香烟消费强度的影响,同时评估香烟消费与社会经济状况之间的关系。
我们使用托比特回归的估计结果证实,社会援助受助者人均每周比非受助者多消费3.39支香烟。对印度尼西亚家庭生活调查面板数据进行的双重差分回归显示,社会援助项目使人均每周香烟消费量显著增加2.8支。我们还发现:1)在营养、健康和教育支出方面,吸烟者的社会经济指标低于非吸烟者;2)与吸烟者同住的年轻家庭成员受教育程度较低,平均病假天数较多。
有合理证据支持以下假设,即印度尼西亚的社会援助项目导致受助者的烟草消费强度更大。这些发现呼吁对社会援助项目进行政策改革,在社会援助受助者的资格条件方面更加谨慎。增加与吸烟行为相关的新条件可能会降低低收入群体的吸烟强度,从长远来看,可能会提高社会援助项目在提高低收入人群社会经济福利方面的有效性。