Faculty of Medicine, School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia.
The NHMRC Centre of Research Excellence on Achieving the Tobacco Endgame, School of Public Health, The University of Queensland, Herston, Queensland, Australia.
Addiction. 2024 Nov;119(11):1923-1936. doi: 10.1111/add.16618. Epub 2024 Jul 15.
Tobacco product excise taxes are a cost-effective method for reducing tobacco consumption, but industry pricing and marketing strategies encourage consumers to engage in price-minimizing behaviours (PMBs). We investigated the relationship between tobacco tax increases and PMBs, measuring whether PMBs intensify following tax increases, whether low-income consumers with higher nicotine dependence are more likely to engage in PMBs and whether PMBs are negatively related to smoking cessation.
This was a systematic review with meta-analysis of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies from seven databases up to March 2023, using studies that reported any product- and purchasing-related smoking behaviours post-tobacco tax increase in a general representative population. Sixty-eight studies were quality-assessed using the Newcastle-Ottawa scale. All studies were narratively synthesized, with five studies involving 13 068-26 575 participants providing data for pooled analyses on PMBs [purchasing lower-priced brands, roll-your-own (RYO) tobacco and cartons] pre- and post-tax increases using a random effects meta-analytical model.
Fifty-seven studies reported on legal PMBs, and 17 studies reported illicit cigarette purchasing. Meta-analysis showed that consecutive tax increases were positively associated with purchasing RYO [odds ratio (OR) = 1.60, 95% confidence interval (CI) = 1.04-2.46], especially in higher tobacco taxing environments, with substantial heterogeneity (I = 96%). Lower income and higher nicotine dependence were associated with purchasing lower-priced brands and RYO, whereas higher income and nicotine dependence were associated with purchasing cartons, large-sized packs and cross-border sales. Less evidence associated illicit tobacco purchases with tax increases or PMBs with smoking cessation.
Tobacco purchasers' PMBs vary widely by state, country and time-period within countries. Both legal and illegal PMBs, potentially influenced by industry pricing tactics, may exacerbate health inequalities and dilute the public health benefits of tobacco tax increases.
烟草制品消费税是减少烟草消费的一种具有成本效益的方法,但行业定价和营销策略鼓励消费者采取最低价格行为(PMBs)。我们调查了烟草税增加与 PMBs 之间的关系,衡量了在税收增加后 PMBs 是否加剧,尼古丁依赖程度较高的低收入消费者是否更有可能采取 PMBs,以及 PMBs 是否与戒烟呈负相关。
这是一项系统评价,对截至 2023 年 3 月来自七个数据库的横断面和纵向研究进行了元分析,使用了在一般代表性人群中报告烟草税增加后任何与产品和购买相关的吸烟行为的研究。68 项研究使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表进行了质量评估。所有研究均进行了叙述性综合,其中五项研究涉及 13068-26575 名参与者,使用随机效应荟萃分析模型对税收增加前后的 PMBs[购买低价品牌、自卷(RYO)烟草和纸箱]进行了汇总分析。
57 项研究报告了合法的 PMBs,17 项研究报告了非法香烟购买。Meta 分析表明,连续的税收增加与购买 RYO 呈正相关[比值比(OR)=1.60,95%置信区间(CI)=1.04-2.46],特别是在烟草税较高的环境中,异质性较大(I=96%)。较低的收入和较高的尼古丁依赖与购买低价品牌和 RYO 有关,而较高的收入和尼古丁依赖与购买纸箱、大包装和跨境销售有关。较少的证据表明非法烟草购买与税收增加或 PMBs 与戒烟有关。
烟草购买者的 PMBs 在州、国家和国家内的不同时期差异很大。合法和非法的 PMBs,可能受到行业定价策略的影响,可能会加剧健康不平等,削弱烟草税增加带来的公共卫生效益。