The Behavioral Pharmacology Research Unit, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2023 Aug 19;25(9):1556-1564. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntad067.
The Tobacco Control Act gives the U.S. Food and Drug Administration authority to establish a reduced-nicotine content standard in combusted cigarettes. This future potential regulation may pose a significant public health benefit; however, black markets may arise to meet demand for normal-nicotine content cigarettes among smokers unwilling to transition to or use an alternative product.
We determined the behavioral-economic substitutability of illicit normal-nicotine content cigarettes and e-cigarettes for reduced-nicotine content cigarettes in a hypothetical reduced-nicotine regulatory market. Adult cigarette smokers were recruited online to complete hypothetical cigarette purchasing tasks for usual-brand cigarettes, reduced-nicotine content cigarettes, and illicit normal-nicotine content cigarettes, as well as a cross-commodity task in which reduced-nicotine content cigarettes were available across multiple prices and illicit cigarettes were concurrently available for $12/pack. Participants completed two three-item cross-commodity purchasing tasks in which e-cigarettes were available for $4/pod or $12/pod alongside reduced-nicotine content cigarettes and illicit cigarettes.
Usual-brand cigarette purchasing was greater than illicit normal-nicotine content cigarettes and less than reduced-nicotine content cigarettes. In the cross-commodity purchasing tasks, illicit cigarettes and e-cigarettes both served as economic substitutes for reduced-nicotine content cigarettes; however, when e-cigarettes were available for $4/pod, they were purchased at greater levels than illicit cigarettes and resulted in greater reductions in reduced-nicotine content cigarettes purchasing than when available for $12/pod.
These data suggest that some smokers are willing to engage in illicit cigarette purchasing in a reduced-nicotine regulatory environment, but e-cigarette availability at lower prices may reduce black-market engagement and shift behavior away from combusted cigarette use.
E-cigarettes available at low, but not high, prices were stronger substitutes for legal, reduced-nicotine content cigarettes than illegal, normal-nicotine content cigarettes in a hypothetical reduced-nicotine tobacco market. Our findings suggest the availability of relatively inexpensive e-cigarettes may reduce illicit cigarette purchasing and combusted cigarette use under a reduced-nicotine cigarette standard.
《烟草控制法案》赋予美国食品和药物管理局在可燃香烟中设定低尼古丁含量标准的权力。这一未来潜在法规可能会带来重大的公共健康益处;然而,黑市可能会出现,以满足不愿意过渡或使用替代产品的吸烟者对正常尼古丁含量香烟的需求。
我们在假设的低尼古丁监管市场中,确定了非法正常尼古丁含量香烟和电子烟对低尼古丁含量香烟的行为经济学替代性。成年香烟吸烟者通过在线招募,完成了对常用品牌香烟、低尼古丁含量香烟和非法正常尼古丁含量香烟的假设香烟购买任务,以及一项跨商品任务,其中低尼古丁含量香烟在多个价格下可用,而非法香烟同时以 12 美元/包的价格可用。参与者完成了两个三项目的跨商品购买任务,其中电子烟以 4 美元/管或 12 美元/管的价格与低尼古丁含量香烟和非法香烟一起提供。
常用品牌香烟的购买量大于非法正常尼古丁含量香烟,小于低尼古丁含量香烟。在跨商品购买任务中,非法香烟和电子烟都是低尼古丁含量香烟的经济替代品;然而,当电子烟以 4 美元/管的价格出售时,它们的购买量大于非法香烟,并且导致购买低尼古丁含量香烟的数量减少,比以 12 美元/管的价格出售时更大。
这些数据表明,在低尼古丁监管环境下,一些吸烟者愿意从事非法香烟购买,但电子烟以较低的价格提供可能会减少黑市参与,并使行为从可燃香烟使用转移。
在假设的低尼古丁烟草市场中,价格较低但不高的电子烟是合法的低尼古丁含量香烟的替代品,比非法的正常尼古丁含量香烟更强。我们的研究结果表明,在低尼古丁香烟标准下,相对便宜的电子烟的供应可能会减少非法香烟购买和可燃香烟使用。