(This
resource corresponds to Module 2.)
Both states and communities can institute
laws that have the effect of raising the prices of alcohol and tobacco
products. At the state level, this can be done through excise taxes
on alcohol and cigarettes. At the local level, communities can charge
outlets a fee to acquire a license to sell alcohol products; they can
also ban promotions that offer rebates or bar-sponsored "happy
hour" bargains. Here are some examples of laws that have proven
effective:
- Increase excise taxes on the sale of alcohol
and cigarettes. Increasing the price of alcohol and tobacco
through taxes is an effective way to reduce consumption: It reduces
both the number of people who use and the amount consumed by users.1 Research
suggests that young people are particularly responsive to an increase
in cigarette prices.2
Alcohol excise tax hikes are primarily paid by
the small number of drinkers who drink the most alcohol (and
who are responsible for the highest concentration of alcohol-related
problems and their costs to society).3 Most consumers
do not detect a difference in price; rather, consumers pay
in proportion to the amount they consume. The resulting revenue
can then fund key state or community programs.4 For
example, in 1993, New Mexico instituted a state alcohol excise
tax increase that now generates $15 million annually in new
revenues; the state allocates about one-third of this to local
prevention and treatment activities.5
Similarly, many states have raised the excise
tax on cigarettes and used these revenues to fund tobacco prevention
activities. California was among the first to approve a significant
statewide increase in its tobacco excise tax. In 1988, California
voters approved a referendum that called for a 25-cent increase
in the State cigarette tax, with one-fourth of the $600 million
annual revenue designated for tobacco research and prevention
efforts designed to reduce the prevalence of smoking. Following
this tax increase, total per-capita smoking in California fell
at a higher rate than in the rest of the United States.6 While
it is difficult to determine whether this decrease can be attributed
to the tax alone or to the prevention and cessation activities,
researchers assume that the price increase played a significant
role in this downward trend.7
- Require licensing fees for alcohol outlets and
tobacco vendors. While state agencies rarely grant local
communities the power to impose taxes on alcohol, local jurisdictions
do have the power to charge permit filing and business-license fees
to cover the administrative and enforcement costs of regulating and
monitoring alcohol sales activities.8 This can have the
same end result—an increase in the retail price of alcohol—and
is a feasible policy option for local communities. Some communities
also charge nonrefundable permit-filing fees, from a few hundred
to a few thousand dollars, which cover the costs of processing and
enforcing applications for zoning permits.9 In Shoreview,
Minnesota, for instance, a local ordinance requires tobacco vendors
to be licensed by the city. License fees, at $250 per year, are used
to fund merchant education efforts and compliance checks. A vendor’s
license may be suspended if he or she receives three or more violations
within 24 months.10
- Ban discounts on alcohol and tobacco products.
Promotions, such as "happy hour" and "women drink for
free," increase consumption of alcohol by lowering alcohol prices
for short periods of time.11 Communities can prevent restaurants
and bars from hosting happy hours and other price promotions, or require
that promotions be restricted to free food instead of lower alcohol
prices.12
References
- Chaloupka, F. J. and Grossman, M. (1996). Price,
tobacco control policies, and youth smoking. Unpublished Working
Paper No. 5740. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research;
Edwards, G., Anderson, P., Babor, T. F., Casswell, S., Ferrence,
R., Giesbrecht, N., Godfrey, C., Holder, H. D., Lemmens, P., Makela,
K., Midanik. L. T., Norstrom, T., Osterberg, E., Romelsjo, A., Room,
R., Simpura, J., and Skog, O. (1994). Alcohol policy and the
public good. New York: Oxford University Press; National Cancer
Institute (May, 1993). The impact of cigarette excise taxes on
smoking among children and adults: Summary report of a National Cancer
Institute expert panel. Paper presented at the annual information
exchange; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (1989). Reducing
the health consequences of smoking: 25 years of progress. A
report of the Surgeon General. Atlanta, GA: Office on Smoking and
Health, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services (1992). Youth access to tobacco.
Washington, DC: Office of Evaluation and Inspectors, Office of the
Inspector General; and U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(in press). The context for change: The efficacy of the interventions
for smoking prevention and control. A report of the Surgeon
General. Atlanta, GA: Office on Smoking and Health, Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
- Lewit, E. M., Hyland, A., Kerrebrock, N., and Cummings,
K. M. (1997). Price, public policy, and smoking in young people. Tobacco
Control, 6(Suppl. 2), S17–24; and Gardner, S. E. and Brounstein,
P. J. (2001). Series guide to science-based practices. Principles
of Substance Abuse Prevention. Rockville, MD: U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services, Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services
Administration, Center for Substance Abuse Prevention, Division of
Knowledge Development and Evaluation. Available online at http://modelprograms.samhsa.gov/pdfs/pubs_principles.pdf.
- Center for Science in the Public Interest (1996). State
alcohol taxes and health: A citizen’s action guide. Washington,
DC.
- Center for Science in the Public Interest (1996). State
alcohol taxes and health: A citizen’s action guide. Washington.
DC; Toomey, T. and Wagenaar, A. (1999). Policy options for prevention:
The case of alcohol; Journal of Public Health Policy, 20(2),
193–212; and Gardner, S. E., and Brounstein, P. J. (2001).
Series guide to science-based Prevention Practices. Principles
of Substance Abuse Prevention.
- Center for Science in the Public Interest (1996). State
alcohol taxes and health: A citizen’s action guide. Washington,
DC.
- Elder, J. P., Edwards, C. C., Conway, T. L., Kenney,
E., Johnson, C. A., and Bennett E. (1996). Independent evaluation of
the California Tobacco Education Program. Public Health Reports,
111(4), 353–358.
- Elder, J. P., Edwards, C. C., Conway, T. L., Kenney,
E., Johnson, C. A., and Bennett E. (1996). Independent evaluation of
the California Tobacco Education Program. Public Health Reports,
111(4), 353–358.
- Prevention Enhancement Protocols System (1999). Preventing
problems related to alcohol availability: Environmental approaches.
Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention.
- Prevention Enhancement Protocols System (1999). Preventing
problems related to alcohol availability: Environmental approaches.
Rockville, MD: Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration,
Center for Substance Abuse Prevention.
- Jacobson, P. D and Wasserman, J. (1997). Tobacco
control laws: Implementation and enforcement. Santa Monica,
CA: RAND.
- Babor, T. F., Mendelson, J. H., Greenberg, I., and Kuehnle,
J. (1978). Experimental analysis of the "happy hour": Effects
of purchase price on alcohol consumption. Psychopharmacology,
58(1), 35–41; and Toomey, T. and Wagenaar, A. (1999). Policy
options for prevention: The case of alcohol. Journal of Public
Health Policy, 20(2), 193–212.
- Toomey, T. and Wagenaar, A. (1999). Policy
options for prevention: The case of alcohol. Journal of Public
Health Policy, 20(2), 193–212.
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