Imperial College Business School, Centre for Health Economics and Policy Innovation, London, UK.
Pan American Health Organization, Washington, DC, USA.
Addiction. 2023 Jul;118(7):1389-1395. doi: 10.1111/add.16146. Epub 2023 Mar 8.
Excise taxes represent one of the most cost-effective policies to reduce the harmful use of alcohol. Existing information about their design is limited and no standardized metric has been used to compare tax levels in the Region of the Americas. This study aimed to compare alcohol excise tax policies throughout the Americas, compare tax levels and consider opportunities to improve the impact of excise taxes on alcohol consumption and health.
Descriptive analysis using a method developed by the Pan American Health Organization and adapted from the World Health Organization's tobacco tax monitoring. Data were collected by surveying ministries of finance and reviewing tax legislation in effect as of November 2020 in the Region of the Americas.
Tax policy design indicators, taxes as a percentage of the retail price of the most-sold brand of beer, wine and spirits, including a weighted average indicator across beverage types, and tax levels per standard drink (10 g ethanol) in international dollars at purchasing power parity.
Thirty-three countries in the Americas (94%) apply excise taxes on alcoholic beverages, with Argentina and Uruguay not applying them to wine. There is significant heterogeneity in excise tax design across countries and beverage types. Only a third of amount-specific excise taxes are regularly adjusted to avoid erosion. Regional median excise taxes represent the highest share of the price for spirits (21.4%) and the lowest for wine (11.0%). The regional median consumption-weighted average excise tax share across all beverage types is 12.0%. Excise tax shares are generally higher in Latin America than in the Caribbean and Canada. Excise tax levels per standard drink are generally lower for spirits than for other beverages.
Alcohol excise tax policies vary significantly across the Americas, often reflecting national consumption patterns. To maximize their public health impact, tax rates could be increased and tax designs improved, particularly to ensure higher tax burdens on high-strength drinks.
消费税是减少有害饮酒最具成本效益的政策之一。现有关于其设计的信息有限,也没有使用标准化的衡量标准来比较泛美地区的税收水平。本研究旨在比较整个美洲的酒精消费税政策,比较税收水平,并探讨提高消费税对酒精消费和健康影响的机会。
使用泛美卫生组织开发并改编自世界卫生组织烟草税监测的方法进行描述性分析。数据通过调查财政部和审查截至 2020 年 11 月在泛美地区生效的税收立法收集。
税收政策设计指标,按最畅销品牌啤酒、葡萄酒和烈酒的零售价计算的税收百分比,包括跨饮料类型的加权平均指标,以及以国际元(购买力平价)为单位的每标准饮料(10 克乙醇)的税收水平。
美洲的 33 个国家(94%)对酒精饮料征收消费税,阿根廷和乌拉圭不对葡萄酒征税。各国和饮料类型之间的消费税设计存在显著差异。只有三分之一的特定金额消费税定期调整以避免侵蚀。区域中位数消费税占烈酒价格的最高份额(21.4%),葡萄酒的最低份额(11.0%)。所有饮料类型的消费加权平均消费税份额的区域中位数为 12.0%。烈酒的消费税份额通常高于拉丁美洲,而低于加勒比和加拿大。每标准饮料的消费税水平通常烈酒低于其他饮料。
酒精消费税政策在泛美地区差异很大,通常反映了国家的消费模式。为了最大限度地发挥其对公共卫生的影响,可以提高税率并改进税收设计,特别是确保对高浓度饮料征收更高的税负。