Cross-border health and productivity effects of alcohol policies

This paper studies the cross-border health and productivity effects of alcohol taxes. We estimate the effect of a large cut in the Finnish alcohol tax on mortality, alcohol related illnesses and work absenteeism in Sweden. This tax cut led to large differences in the prices of alcoholic beverages be...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Johansson, Per, Pekkarinen, Tuomas, Verho, Jouko
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Bonn: Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) 2012
Subjects:
H23
H73
I18
eco
Online Access:https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:101:1-201206146652
http://hdl.handle.net/10419/58472
Description
Summary:This paper studies the cross-border health and productivity effects of alcohol taxes. We estimate the effect of a large cut in the Finnish alcohol tax on mortality, alcohol related illnesses and work absenteeism in Sweden. This tax cut led to large differences in the prices of alcoholic beverages between these two countries and to a considerable increase in cross-border shopping. The effect is identified using differences-in-differences strategy where changes in these outcomes in regions near the Finnish border are compared to changes in other parts of northern Sweden. We use register data where micro level data on deaths, hospitalisations and absenteeism is merged to population-wide micro data on demographics and labour market outcomes. Our results on the effect of the Finnish tax cut on mortality and alcohol-related hospitalisations in Sweden are very imprecise. However, we find that workplace absenteeism increased by 5% for males and by 13% for females near the Finnish border as a result of the tax cut.