Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology and Newborn Health, Melbourne Medical School, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.
Centre for Alcohol Policy Research, School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia.
Int J Drug Policy. 2024 Jul;129:104502. doi: 10.1016/j.drugpo.2024.104502. Epub 2024 Jun 28.
Alcohol pricing policies may reduce alcohol-related harms, yet little work has been done to model their effectiveness beyond health outcomes especially in Australia. We aim to estimate the impacts of four taxation and minimum unit pricing (MUP) interventions on selected social harms across sex and age subgroups in Australia.
We used econometrics and epidemiologic simulations using demand elasticity and risk measures. We modelled four policies including (A) uniform excise rates (UER) (based on alcohol units) (B) MUP $1.30 on all alcoholic beverages (C) UER + 10 % (D) MUP$ 1.50. People who consumed alcohol were classified as (a) moderate (≤ 14 Australian standard drinks (SDs) per week) (b) Hazardous (15-42 SDs per week for men and 14-35 ASDs for women) and (c) Harmful (> 42 SDs per week for men and > 35 ASDs for women). Outcomes were sickness absence, sickness presenteeism, unemployment, antisocial behaviours, and police-reported crimes. We used relative risk functions from meta-analysis, cohort study, cross-sectional survey, or attributable fractions from routine criminal records. We applied the potential impact fraction to estimate the reduction in social harms by age group and sex after implementation of pricing policies.
All four modelled pricing policies resulted in a decrease in the overall mean baseline of current alcohol consumption, primarily due to fewer people drinking harmful amounts. These policies also reduced the total number of crimes and workplace harms compared to the current taxation system. These reductions were consistent across all age and sex subgroups. Specifically, sickness absence decreased by 0.2-0.4 %, alcohol-related sickness presenteeism by 7-9 %, unemployment by 0.5-0.7 %, alcohol-related antisocial behaviours by 7.3-11.1 %, and crimes by 4-6 %. Of all the policies, the implementation of a $1.50 MUP resulted in the largest reductions across most outcome measures.
Our results highlight that alcohol pricing policies can address the burden of social harms in Australia. However, pricing policies should just form part of a comprehensive alcohol policy approach along with other proven policy measures such as bans on aggressive marketing of alcoholic products and enforcing the restrictions on the availability of alcohol through outlet density regulation or reduced hours of sale to have a more impact on social harms.
酒精定价政策可能会减少与酒精相关的危害,但除了健康结果之外,很少有工作致力于对其效果进行建模,尤其是在澳大利亚。我们旨在估计四种税收和最低单位定价(MUP)干预措施对澳大利亚特定社会危害在性别和年龄亚组中的影响。
我们使用计量经济学和流行病学模拟,使用需求弹性和风险措施。我们对包括以下四种政策的影响进行建模:(A)统一消费税(UER)(基于酒精单位)(B)所有酒精饮料征收 1.30 澳元的 MUP(C)UER+10%(D)MUP$1.50。饮酒者被分为(a)适度(每周≤14 个澳大利亚标准饮料(SD))(b)危险(男性每周 15-42 SD,女性每周 14-35 ASDs)和(c)有害(男性每周>42 SD,女性每周>35 ASDs)。结果是病假、病假出勤、失业、反社会行为和警方报告的犯罪。我们使用荟萃分析、队列研究、横断面调查的相对风险函数,或常规犯罪记录的归因分数。我们应用潜在影响分数来估计实施定价政策后按年龄组和性别划分的社会危害减少情况。
四种模拟的定价政策都导致了当前饮酒量的总体平均基线下降,主要是因为饮酒量有害的人数减少。与现行税收制度相比,这些政策还减少了犯罪和工作场所危害的总数。这些减少在所有年龄和性别亚组中都是一致的。具体而言,病假减少 0.2-0.4%,与酒精相关的病假出勤减少 7-9%,失业减少 0.5-0.7%,与酒精相关的反社会行为减少 7.3-11.1%,犯罪减少 4-6%。在所有政策中,实施 1.50 澳元的 MUP 会导致大多数结果指标的最大降幅。
我们的研究结果表明,酒精定价政策可以解决澳大利亚的社会危害负担。然而,定价政策应仅作为全面酒精政策措施的一部分,同时还应采取其他经证实的政策措施,如禁止酒类产品的攻击性营销,并通过控制酒类销售点密度或减少销售时间来限制酒类供应,以更有效地减少社会危害。