Philip Morris
the Taxes of Sin Do Smokers and Drinkers Pay Their Way?
Fields
- Author
- Keeler, E.B.
- Manning, W.G.
- Newhouse, J.P.
- Sloss, E.M.
- Wasserman, J.
- Manning, W.G.
- Area
- KEANE,DENISE/OFFICE
- Type
- PSCI, PUBLICATION SCIENTIFIC
- ABST, ABSTRACT
- BIBL, BIBLIOGRAPHY
- CHAR, CHART, GRAPH, TABLE, MAPS
- ABST, ABSTRACT
- Site
- N388
- Named Person
- Amler, R.
- Benjamin, B.
- Friedman, B.
- Hanley, J.
- Kahan, J.
- Keeler, E.B.
- Leu, R.
- Manning, W.G.
- Marcus, S.
- Mitchell, B.
- Newhouse, J.P.
- Peterson, J.
- Phelps, C.
- Sloss, E.M.
- Smith, J.
- Vogt, T.
- Waingrow, S.
- Warner, K.
- Wasserman, J.
- Benjamin, B.
- Request
- Stmn/R1-024
- Stmn/R1-025
- Stmn/R1-048
- Stmn/R1-072
- Stmn/R1-073
- Stmn/R1-025
- Document File
- 2024719379/2024719637/Social Costs Indoor Air
- Named Organization
- Natl Center for Health Services Research
- Rand
- Univ of Mi Ann Arbor
- Rand
- Author (Organization)
- Rand
- Systemetrics
- Univ of Mi Ann Arbor
- Harvard Univ
- Jama
- Mcgraw Hill
- Systemetrics
- Litigation
- Stmn/Produced
- Master ID
- 2024719448/9454
Related Documents: - Date Loaded
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The Taxes of Sin
Do 5rnakers and Drinkers Pay Their Way?
uwuproG, venrunq, phD; Emmett B. Keeler. ahD, Josephl'P. Ne.vhcuse, PhD;
Elizabeth M. Slose: PnD;,Jeftrey Wksserman;,PhD
VYS estirnate the lifetime, tllscounted costs that smokers and drinkers iinpose~on
aMios through collecttvey tlnanCed health lnsurance, pensions; dlgability i nsu r-
enee, gtoup; Ift lneursnce;, firea, motor-vehicle' accidents, and the criminal
justice syetem, Although nonsmokers subsidize smokers' mediaelicare and
gr,oup Iifo ensur'BnGe, 6rnokere subaldire nonsmokars" ponsions and nursing
homs'payenents; On balancit. smokere probably pay their way at the curnent
isWN of.xciee tanea on cigarettes: but one may, nonethele sa , wi sh to fal Ce those
taxos to reducethe numberof.dbiescentsmokers. in r,ontrast, drinkere donot
pay the'It vreay: current excise taxetson alcohol cover only'about halfithe costs
Unposed on'otftars:
i JAVA : 1 WW;$61 a e04+1 et51
POOR h4alth habitai such as smoking
aad heavydrtn;tins; carry costs not only
!br rnoken aad `hea vy drinkera, but forr
everyoni elee' ae wall. Concern about
Lhese eosts has prompted not only.
}kalth-pt~omotion efforti, but also pro-
posals to incrsaae both fedrral and state'
etcise taxes on cigaret'tes and alcohol.
Fbr such ezxes to be at"an econottt[caUyy
efficient level, they must' at lsaet cover
the coats to others thatarise tyom smok-
ing and heavy drinking: We term the
co.ts to. otlfert cr1tirnW roste, in Oon-traat to those borne by the', smoker or
heavy'drinker, whichwe t'arm intsmal'
coata.
Some external costa, areobvious, for
example, the'danage caused by drunk
driving and p.eaive emoking: ot'hers are
more subtl.e, for example, the higher
medical eosts of'emokers that are fi.
naneed by health uuurAnee premiums
atd psysoll taxes. Such premiurpe and
payroll taxas.re the aame for smokers
and' nonsmokere (unlike individual lik
instuaace premiunul- As a rwutt, non-
ernolters =ay eubsidize smokiny:
Uur purpose in -this artirJe sa to quan-
tify externat costs. Earlier estimates of
the costs of smoking and d.+tinking" (pf.
Fpnl iTIM!LP*AISifr/ C1 MIC7:,Qen. ute4,pei (rjr Van-
r.wy n+.axnWCiroorwron.Svt'awo,icaCsa'(O-s
NanMwQ..Ko~ , NM.pOV"
sbN...nd'.wqM^nr+):.
IM 0..=sron.dF+eNI.~ a*y- itsseawla.d Etluc.FOn..
"a-.wd l.M+...hY Cr+,t,tlQs.,Masf ([Y, Nwnoun); .
a+*o Sy.lantnot.~+CGrs.-~nr~ Srnts Be/Gars:. C."r .
rvr wasee+/wl)i
To ODpMed* Md kD'KtW,ys.>tDMMd ntLT i... .
6ot.N 1-c.o oen,+...n,a'. 910 no.ea M . be eon«v.o
t.'.'.D7feMlrq:1!`. DDU31ei vo oc1'1On. d -TM MW C.
Gs~a r+ot vy p.nep a rs t15 onxnmert o~ ry,
o/tM ~ndMS.~Ys ~.~.0 Mq/M'r AO',ptf tp.'MC.DMrFK Pd'NeVh S.'..
ACM..IJ.anaOn'eR ViO ftMGy. Tty Ul'ivlNtiNY tY MiGrv..
a.,. ,.2Q yai.ww.,pt.n r-hqMq:. Ann Aloes..rs..y:.Cp:
(o, Mann+qt
@ce of!T)tchnology, Assessment, unpub-
llsited datal 19&6) are not suitable for
analysis of'taxes beoause they do not
always dlat3ngufaH between internaIl
and externalcosts, nor do they calculate
the lifetirne costs of poor health habits.
MfTHOOS
External Costs and Their Eatlm.tlon
We Illustrate our conceptual frame
work in tetme af'amokingbutthe same
principles apply to our analVses of
dtdnking.
Table 1 illuFtrntes the division be
tween the internal andlexternaiAo9ts of
smoking. In the case of aleohol' abuse,
we also consider the costsof mot'mr-yeh i-
cleaccidenta and criminal justine.
One goal of'an eounomicaily. efficient
tax on smoking or tobacco is to hawe'the
smoker bear the costs that he Imposes
on othere when deciding, whether or
how much to amoke.. Costa imposed on
other f>amity members, however, are
difficult to claesify as internal.or ezter=
nal because it is not clear whether those
coete would, in any event, be taken into
account by the smoker. If'they would
be, then they are internat~ costs. A1~
though our baae-case estimates claeaify
suchcosta as interna.l, we show the ef-
fect;f of, treating certain costs borne by
otherfami[y members as extennal.
A eimple example'thet considers on1yy
medical coete may elarifN the'division
between internali andl external cost'.
Suapose'a saorker, has a group health
insurance policy'that pays 76%. of his
medical bills, and suppoee that amokirtg
a pack of agarettee per d ay raiaee merii-
tal bills by 56000. The amount'the work-
er patia. .f1hM (0.26 x 800Q=1500); ia a
component of internal' costs. Secause.
thte smoker does not pay higher premi-
ums',that reflect hie or her higher coats,
the remainder of the cost, $4.500; is a
component of external coats.
To estimate extetttal costr, weshould
not contrast the medical andlother ex-
penses of Imokere to nonsmokers, be-
cauae nonsmokere differ from amokels
in other wa)tie-tiiat affect the various
components ofcnsEauch as medlcaliax-
penses: For example, according,tn~the
1989National Health Interview Survey
(NHIS), those who never smoke are 1.5'
times more likely than current smokere.
to have more than a high school educa
tion. Rather; we contraat emokers toa'
hypothetical group of "ttonemoking,
amokere," people who are llke emokers i
in age; sex, education, drinking habits,
and several other ways described here-
in, exeepu that' they have never
smoked.' 1b test how eensitive our esti-
mates are to diffeencee between emok -
ing and not'smoking; however, we also
contrast medical andi other costs of'
unokerm to thoseofactual nonsmokers.
Our methods estimate lifetime' costs
by tncking expenditures for two hypo-
thetical cohorts o(ine:i and,w-omett from
age 20, years to death. One' cohort
emokas; the other doesnot. We develop
life tables for each'oohort showing the
probabilit7 of surviving to each age
from age 20 yeare. Theas tables aome
from applying estintateb oft.he relative
risk of smoking to the 19$0ilife tables of
the liS' population.' Relative risk was
estimatsd!by applying fihe L989'Centera
for Diaease Control health risk apprais-
al program' to the ever smokers in our
sample twice-once with their actual
smok4lty statue and once with their
amoldng, atatua i changed to "never
emolted."
Inijudginganypoliby'that has'long-term effectalitie itnportantto(liscountfuture costs, thereby
trtakittg,costa that
ocrur at different times'commensurate.
A dollar received today is worth more'
t-harn a dollhr receiti'ed'S'5years from mow
(even witihoutinflation). A current dol
lar can i1e invested and'earn interest so
that at the endlof 15 years it will he
worth more then $2 tae54e). Because the
proper rat.e of discount is oontroversial.,
we have comp:ited results for rates that
apan the range betweenu% and 10%.
,
The expected net external co.ta per
pacR are thesumrof t:he immediate ooEts
1QO4 JAneA,)JSrcn w; 1989-vo12@r, No 11 5- Tsr-AAann r,fl 6i a[
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per pack andi the cumulating lifetime
costs per paek: We assume that thF
ccscs of fires, motor-%.aiiiole accidenta,
and oni'ninal justtce are imniediate; 1e;
each cigarette or ounee of ethsnol f,aa a
certain probability of caueing such,cost3
inahe immediateperiod atter purchaeec
but once the cigarette ie smoked or the
alcohoi consumed, the probability drops
quickly to zero, For Nuch aoetB, we oli-
vide eetimated,national annuaCcriete by
the annual packs (or excess ounceia. T!h e'
cumulative net lifetime external eonts
are given by'the foliolwing:
sb
~ a'*2D Y p;A?tll, x CtNI,.
,_V
a
-L b`10'x FtAINF>7, x CtvF~~.
/-M
rvh,ere b indicatea ithe annual discotmt.
Eaetar tU[1'+ rl) if r ia the discount rate;',
P(4lt): the probability of survivingg
fremege 80 yeara to at least age tyear>s,
condit,ional on ismOking; C(R),l the annu-
al toats minue t.xee and'premiuma for
smokers of' age t; Pl the probe-
bility of aurvtvtng,from'aRi 20 yoarb:to
at )eax age t'yeara, conditional on not
smoiting; snd l the annual costs
mious taxes and premiums for smokers
dsge t p!ears if they had never amokedl
The external eost+s cotrn fronT collea
tioel,u financed progzams; including
health ineuranoe, pensions, sick leave;;
disability ineurance, and group life in-
surance. Theee'programs'are 5nanoed
by taxes land premiums that db not dif-
ferentiat,e between smokers and non-
smokers. Because amokere' havee
ahorter iife expectancies, they will pay
lesa of the taxes andtpremiumr that ti-
nance these programs. Ib simplify the
calculation of' how much srnokers and
nonsmokers pay annually to finance
these programs, we assume that each
pays the same'proportLon of. earninga;,
trhere the proportion is just enough to
tlne,nca these ptograma:' Tbe diecount.
ed. expected lifetitne costs per pack are
cakulated by dividing the lifetimecosts
by the eapeeted, number of packs
smoked nra lifetime:
Ln eatunating,the external costs of
smoking and drtnkdnR: we reliedan self-
reported'conaaunptioni Because people
underreport their oonaurnptioni we
have corrected for the difference be-
tween'acti:al and!reported use. The re-
ported'numb.r of packs per dapy was
multiplied by 1.5i ar.d reported aleohol!
cousumption was multiplied by 215:'
'
Our figures for pension inaome' have
been corrected for a 21% rate of
onderreporting:'
Ou r eetimaf.es ore based on daoa from
a number of sources:, The prunsry
aource' for, those under age 60 - years ia
The RAtiD Corporationh Heaith' In-
Tade 1i-Co.uor,swil
P.ewy14~. a1w/,. 5+n04..M ta*Hf Cnwe-eY'and o4hw.'
Ps!nanAriMi4!g 5-al:wanyt[n+ny, CGMCYaM.na.Otly^.
MMffrek'wel. CGqarWnu Inwre.w qlmburf4nMM.
sICid IHw'. unCO.wdlekklee.A car.wdatd'b.er
t7WYt11tMy. Fo/eQOPl intl norretJlaced.
by da0bllYy 4yyt.r4! DMaa111ty mau+anc.
droup O/hinew.f+el i Ne{ylo0y tfeein e.n.M
atrvil ~ De1k.Wwaair,tx*ion plni Soea/5.cun1l.no.ae.n.a-0enMfD!.at.
Wlgee FOreOen.a..po.able.lAcornf. Tereaanaa..we.
o.'wooW: ooitilty beeduao,Nr.epd~byRenl Irowr.apsp.rrtylop O4stokw
Tobeaa~procUC4 Cfp...It.D4rrne.s . !~ . .
P,rnY4n me*lemy, eMW evRarlnO iemap qmly, nhna.m end eowoA.M:,.t cwe.dl byy pasN+..nbt'm0 vur .
WtVielly.taels,tlcnry pyi ytnw Il m.mOMi'as !ntenyl'cof4 .
~WJlent. ~Or YKOt<1h~COMMQIM
r?y COHntd4 we m0M1.Y0NOl1o al '.kNO 91
tE+eW l.ea a+ cqeneneeawq et coraider.d nepFnw..esrtub mas n iMV.n.o tl.Be.d. we oW.d !d cr
.,,aw woua w lo d.UnAlf. e aftRW WeY N.wNe aMD: relfyl ANM e4Vl 10 iDM CSXreIM ..el11e 41f.
rabte a.-E.r.rnat Cous per Pecu d Cpwltes"
olweww n.r
t+eaew eeses 0% ax TOk.
Cdsta Ov pldr, a
MoeleM e"t'
0 36
0A6 ~
0.16
5ck 1qW. 0.0/ 0-01 0.0t'
arouo wuu.+o. 0 1/ o:Of' 0:08
N+a.elnaroM. -o2e -o,os aoa.
11~l1AemWntVensiont -t.a7 -0:2a. -Oi02.
Rbsa 0.02 7 0;07' 0.02 !
Tuae on evRNZ 7o menee e0avspro0nrnel s' -o.eS: -o.Cb' -0.02
TdUneMam4spslpapt.6§ -OA1' 01d 028
tae.s.epeeerhruaps40Y'CnDark,mm -1s7 -ab -c
'TMnYn27MotpeGi..ON'clparelMe re COrryttedsru,1tlen.l Cwte:(In tias.eeNanJ W/0oll
w
c.Waled hrdivldnpt py, tne deaanqenlrnti.r at peou «ndcW.,
tMltlkM N but mwln f, wal, ,eM deroai tan:
tldwlriM. daedsty kwn+c~;
~T~e wm at ~coeu n+~wa:w~ee on eeewy...e0, eoeu u 6YIG~ W0 16~ o!2e r 0.0, . o os -o o~ -o
.aa:...0 cs
-f-00.)
surance Experiment (HIE), because of
its detaIled information regarding hab-
its andlthe medical reasona for the utili'-
ration of medical csre:" Becaus4 per-
sons aged 92 yearsor oltier atthe time of
enrollment were ezcludrdi from the
HIE sample of 5809 persons, we used
data regarding persons greater than
age b8lyears from a 188.'I eupplement to
the N1:IIS. It' included information re-
garding healtii habitei healtH6care use,
and work lose in a sample of 22'418 pel
eons. Inaddipona we compared!the 1983
NHIS resalts' for nonelderly persons
with those from the HIE. We have in-
flated all costd'ata to 1986 dollars using
the eonsumerpriae index.
We estimated differances in spending
for medical care services between those
with and withouteach'habit:,Suc}i dif-
ferences, of'course, rne}^ or nuy not,be
caused by the habit. We addressed this
ambiguity, in two vway s. Firet,, we con-
tcviled for the confounding, characterie-
ticsdescribed; in,the next section. Sec-
ond, although our baee-cttil estimates
include allitnedical eervices except,,nr-
teralty servi,:esand x-ell care, we exem-
ined their sensitivity, to> considering.
onlv costa that arise' from d'lagnoees
thought' to be diroctjy related to smok-
ing and excestive dttinking;,auchas can-
cer of the lung and cirrhoeis of the li iver,
In addition to medical expense, we
estimated the differsnoe in daye lbst
from work between persons with and't without eachihabit, eontrolling for the
confoundi ng variables described herein.
11e eollectively financed oost' of days
sost from work was computed'bymulti-
plying the dailynage'by0:38, the'em-
ployer.f average share of the cost of
work loss through covered aiclt Ibave."'
When estimating the cost ofdriniting;
we controlled for smoking status, and
conversely. Had we not done ao; we
would have attributed aome of the wstY
of smoking toldrinking if emokera tendl
to drink heavil'y. We classified!persons ~y
te former cigarette smokers, current
ve e'sganette smokers, current pipe'or eigar N
smokers, and never smokers bated on
their reaponaes to a smoking hiatory A
queationnaine filled out at thi time of' ~
enrolltnent' in the study. We classiRtd ~
persons as abFtainm~s, forunerdiirtkprs', (~
and current drinkers based on reapone ~
es to the same questionnaire. We col- ~
Iltpaed infonmatibn regail the' cur- ~
rent, drinkera" consumption of tPeer,
~Ar+64'.'dartch~ 17. .1?89~-V3122b1, MO, ti+l
Sim T~x-Nenn,npet 6'
1605

;itMtrW ossils d'pow nsa4e MtiRa,et attarnewe dlscaurnraua,
%ela 3.-lMYMy rd Ee/.nnaf Coats (h 13ae DOllvs) per Paarc q AMUmQtlOnt at bM Ddeeaurrt AsM
tLtoreNtosw
s.s
aser .aoia frem .
wseew »saa+
s»ww.r.w.y caspaeoen .
ww, Nwer:
smoksp
tmtiw,
em."dt:
Ttlw
coaas'
osawssr pert. s
ss+aliesw
oie
oae
030'
ons
oas
leaMrs: 0.0t 0:06' 004, O:Vt Q09
pp9 iM Yr.vw QQS 0103 0 06 0 0F O.Qs.
NwY`e/ts.rs -0.03 -0.03 -o.a2 -o.e01 -a.03
:
assr..rMprebnf -ox. -0.aa -o,W -o.:u, -caa
fba 002 002 002 002 002
.
1YNaisr4ppr,pacM:S. -0:0l. -00e. -o.0e1 -0.06 -0-0,14
%W MlseM/asr.pa* ao 0.:a~. 020 olAt -015 71'.
'EeM d drqMa wrqM an0 Iortnr rnok.ra t0 nwer. vneKr...riM cmM.c~eradMafCS l41d bonRant .
1Ni.o. MaMfM ot unsekd dNa1, wttl+ no ankis ol arrwWlq an sanqr reElsnsrM. ,
:rneNd.. wa.a esNs
~.~eww ewsssry +,.w,e._1
pyin d1mis M eesNnak/q tnroisri Oxfrenhat: Mre sMOksneckutly a.y.t0d1 OMtm moN.sereiqs t1.
MnaRpeara Osr pedr' Oscsufs. at'tYPer NrN~hp rpea Cut M rs a+iysusibts riaf.tttsk.Mlyyr samip nMSs
aw
n
CKM..f. wlMSbb w.e~6~q. d wfi.w .rwn id.My~ an m1; rot su.a ew s,nngl.
.suw 40 eoft w+Mw lws on w".
-9toss a srsss qw+ ena aWw+q tirWok.r end tanrsy na ftudedl sss an
wrune, and spirlt. Into a singlevarlable-
monthly consumption of' ethanol in
ounoss. Witldn the cateQqr-v of carrent:
driaker., keaoy drirtken includt' those
Mbo.repOrtan- ~aYerageof two:or n'InredrWa da4 (Q:z,or mone actual drinks
daiq; with allowance for underreport-
ing). 8ecause light drinkinQ maynot:bey harmful, we ealculate the eost per ounce
In exeess of' two reported I drinks per
daR"" Thue,the drinking enalogpe' of
nonemoirin,`, amoketA are "controlled"
heavy drinkern;,ie, we estimate the ef-
fect of'hypothetically red'uc:ng the oon-
eumption of those with more t)un two
reported drinke per day to two reported
dzinka;per day.
Our base{sse analyeis also controlled
forbealthiasurance eovera a, age, sex,
nce, edueation; the use of
scat' lielts,
family iitcome; exercise, self-tasseased
measurea of physical; mentsll and-gen-
era7 heatth, and farnily siisa, We includtd'ed'ucation ,and seat belt use to measure
attltudee thatmay differ betweel those
with varying hea}th habiU-attitudes
that may affect work lotte and use of
medieal' senices independently of
smoking and Icirlnking.
Pensions and Other tyoate
In addition to thecostsofinedical care
and!work loss;,we cafcutated the other'
components of cost shown in 'Dtioib I.
Data regarding, pension and' disabilitv
payments by age, sex, and educatiomstatua Qome from the Curren.G li6pula-
Lubn Survey, That isurvea! irF also, the
source of'earninga datawhich 1we ude tio
oalculate texes toilnancrthe programs.
tlur estimate of annual property loss
fc9m 6res that' ara associated with eigaL
rebte smoking iu 1340i million (iin 1 1586
dollars).'''&cause:of fire insuranee; we
have assumed these costs,are entirely
external;:but our estimates are notsen.
sitlue toths assumproion.
Our estiinates of.oertain annual ex.
teraal+costs of'tloohol abuee are as fel>
lowi: property damage from motor:ve-
hicle .ocident.; 3M billion, and from
fires, VW million; criminal justice, 53.1.
billion;,and'.-socia! programs, Sii4 mil.
llon."'
It is extremely difficult, and to some
distastefUl, to place a dollar valueon the
innocent divee lost due to fitra, passive
smoking, or drunk driving,, Nevert.he-
1ess, it is often necessary, implicitiy or
explicitly; to place a value on lives lost
whenjudgttlQ the merita of'alt.rnative
policies, bor exsmple; policies leading,to
air potlutiion control or increased auto-
mobile safety. For this analyais;, we in-
elude an explicit value for the lost livee
to avoid the systematic undereounting
of the rostis to society that would occur if
we included.onlythe differences in uee
of inedlcai cana, sick leave: etc.
'Ib defiTe a value flir innocent liver
lost because of fires, passive sntoidnQ,
and drunk driving, we used a methodl
based''on the willingrtess to pay for a
small change in the pt'obability af.ur-
viving:"'This yieldaa value ofS1.66 mii-
lion per life (around $10 per hour, using
years of'life expectancy discounted at.
556), considerably more thin the value
of lost earnings. We believe earnings
are'an inappropriate measurs of the val-
ue of life, in part, because they attribute
a relatively low value to those who are
out of the labor foroe."
FlfBllLTS'Smoktnp
External @osta per Pack of, CiRa-
rettee.-If coste are not discounted.
each pack,of'eig(trettea increases medi-
cal costa:by =4.19, but saves i1182 in
public and private pensione due to a 1.3?'-
minute reduction in life expectancy.
Overail; tEere,ia ia net savings of t0:91
per pack in undiscounted coets (Table
2).
Results change markedly if costs are
discounted ar59i;, l'argelybecausepen-
sioni costs changerfrom -3L82I(at Urle)
to -3b;2& (at 5%) per pack. Penelons
are recei4edliate in 1ife; so discounting
drarnatAcally decreaaest'he differentiL7
between smokera and nonsmoking
smoker5. Lsinga58i disrount'rate, the
total r
and',th
discou
t.ault
ample
Techrr
pack c
exclus
ings fl
coste:
Sen
tiona.
subaid'
sensiU
below
effect
For cc
peds ~
diacou
nesulu
We usF
old pe)
costs'I
ered a
pack; ::
30.15 t:
Ti
to dif;?
scnokin '
smokerather
3;,twlu
insenv
ternal
figure~
ooatt
betu e~i~
exceptemohir
differe
retirer
smokir
mediCa'
noesti
health
(Table
sccibec
nonam.
manne
atnoket
efl<ecte
t;hat' th
ranum
as amc
cafumn
tims I
-iA.ll
per pac'
Fine
gives t,
portion
person. the coe
sufferii
appean
table.
Othe
rnatea c
do not
teUe .YAMA'. tNarch,7. ,g09-vC.J 261 . No , i 2024719450 r:.u45:Ll ~
Sm Te,-tAanninp io1 ai
JAMA' K ~
'

total exterua'..coate perr pack bre g~l:la,
and they nise to 80:24 peYr, pack at a 167c
discount rate. The main rausett:!Creer
resultr are so,n:uch lower tF'a!:, fat ex, ample, the estimate frotn thr U;'fice of.
Thchnology A'saessment of g2:17 per
pack (unpubli.hed dato 1985) is our
exc!euion of changes in lifetime earn-
inp ftam unoking, which are internall
cost8.
Settsitirityy nf Costs to Aasump-
tiots.-Clearly, the magnitude of any
su!lsid5 from nonsmokers to smokers is
serwitive to the discount xate, eepeciall.
below 5% (Figurel. Table 3 shows thr
effect of wryirtg other assump't.ions.
For comparison. the flrst column re-
peats tlte't'+esuits ifrorn Table 2 for a 5&
d5/countrate. 'Ib test bow sensitive tliee
results are to the data source selected
we used NHIS data for yowig ae K el l ass
old persons (Table 3, column 2). Medical
.
costs per pack do not change, but co.-
ered'aick laave eoste rise to-5Q.06 per
pack; and the totalinet eoets rise from
f0: 15 to $11:20 per psck,
'Ib:testhowsensidve the results are
to different assumptions about how
amoking affects- healfhi we contrast
smokees with actual never mnokersi,
rather t}ian rtonsntaldhg smakers. (Ta bl e
3, column 31, The results are relatively
insensitive to thls modificatyon alio; ex-
ternal coeta rise'to $0.28 per pack:.l7iis
figure probably; overstates the true
costa because ittreata all the differences
between , smokers', and never emokers,
except wages. as causa((y related, to
amoking, whereas smokers may have
different: patt,erne of'medical use and
retirement for reasons unrelatedi to
smoking. As another test, we reatrict.ed l'
medieal costa to those ariaing from diag-
noree thought to be related to poor
health liablte; medical costa' ftsll,40.11
(Table 3, column 4). T}ie aatimates de-
scribed herein assumed that a cohort of'f
ntmsntokittr smokers would retire in a
manner sitailar to people who never'
amoked, However, we al.no computed
effecte ontarroe and pensions, assuming
that the pattern of retirement amongg
nonemokittgsmokerawould be the same
as among smokers; ie.- quitting would
not affect age of retirement (Table' 3,
column 4); Combining th'ette aranmp-
tions leads to a lower boundary of
-f0.15 (at a 5% dlscount rate) ion coFts
per pack.
Finally, the iast column in, Table a
giirealtotallcosts: that is.,it incluc4s the
portion of coats that are financed by the
person. It,does not, however, indWde
the coats' ofl premature mortality and
suffering, which -is vrhyy a question mark
app2ars in the'lower rigt:t:oorner ofthbf tabk:.
Othoe t;osta o(Smoklns.-Our eeti-
rnates of the coste of'smoking in'Dable 2
do not inelude t,he, adierse effectE of
Tabiao-.-fREe.na%.6ostsor Nesv~DYSnrsca pn Esceac'-0unce"
nreeou"t nate,
Ek:antI Cq.tt 0'+. aR t6e1
r.y'Jr.a+ ara pensq++ cot+s o.r e.e.ci aur+c.: sMeeca, car+t 026 VC 005.
skK r..w 0.08 0105 ~ nnc~~
O+o~~Di1e.~nwr.ncs 002' 002', 002 '
rruesMp'taTe -oA't 1 t.
Ratlr.w,eM pensqnS - O q= C C3 0:02'.
raussoneamtr+Os:S' -0~15 -0.0e -dI02'
amM7icale+dD.r.t«+tcx+'.Dh^exceaaource.s oe3 029 o~,s.
Malmrrrttloa taeN1lta arna onrnrs nastlee aosn OMr,eaaas.puee, f
Llhs 0t nondmNtma
o se
0.58
056
M/b0"Iarcos'iit d.2i oJS 035
~-
TW'at n!t RtF! Daf e10/H ou't0a. Y +.se 1119 ~ oe
uK awetrxy .t aas 30 r par aaai ouncs. Tn -20 - e -
COlft (.f t9ee dbllarS) pK taCM OlresY. caltuUtk'ot.div-elnq by IN d,tCeut1sd nurnbe a o.Oa..
ounca.
1Ea[MSanunltn3y, rH, s~e dtntal iCay: aed.m.di.arCaM teflc~ta othis iuatM'ordkrrxd*Anp
ihdreaus pasre N r." tne. 0 0os:"uas iowbttly hsuKate.
1150 0 3S~ca% 4Quw a+cwaes ,.cenap ntrwu. cotas. .uc^ as tna Cpopv-0 Cerups,in rro¢w-oency .
accbana !
Rtld ey t/le alp)b0t en.e, nCaCuctwaa ie+atM"~eoDay-mmESa.'^d nipha lyarrtY.»+$ but etaluGN t
YIwA.na,
cosn!asaaurea.np, ev.s^act! o+'akot+oliarnan tpnutar ana cMden (ap. Ainruse olrn7uqa n)arnat
0eun.erNMS) Vtl tAO.e MpCV/N Mtthtn InC7a"tlrlek or ~akfNOhtrn n7r Mleie OeDfnWnla .
,Swn at ODl1& mlnus taxN Cn aa^'Mipa
passive smoking on those outside the'
smoker's family. Passive emoking,
causes an estimated+2400 lung cancer'
deaths per year, and it hat also'been
linked to redizced lung function among
ehildlen of ssnokers. a higher incidence
of respiratory problems for children and
others; a! well as'the di!pleasure of oon=
suming unwanted cigarette smoke:"
Mostof theGe costs are uithin the familk
and are internal i or external I costF de-
pending on the extent to, which the
emoker considers the welfare of others
in his.family when he'smokea. The fig-
ure.s inillAble 2'asaume that sueh costs
atx internal- Ifl, hower.-er,we'treat the,
costs of the:240fi deaths as entirely ex-
tetnal and use an esttmateof willingness
to pay for lower mortallty of $1!.66 mil-
iion. per life," external costs per pack
would rise $0.14.
Because deaths in smokingrrelated
fires are also -almost entirely, within the
family; we hacv treated the costa as
interna! and did inot' inciude Chem in our
estimates. However, lf we were to treat
t,he eostb of such deathn' as ext.ernal,,
some 1fi00'people in 1984 (J. Hall, orall
communication Aug, 13, 1987), we
%muld inorease the external eosts of cig-
arettes;byg0.09 perpaek c+f cigarettes.
The smoker loses 28 discounted min-
utes of life expectancy (ata'55h discount
rate) for each pack smoked (Table 2),
which accounti for S0.981of'discounted
wagps (many of t.he loat minut.as occur
when notvorking). L'eing our est3mat-
ed'wi llingness to pag, for lower mortality'
of ELO per hour, the 2t:,minut'es'is worth
approximatel}' $o. Although we consid-
er the fG an internal costit may none-
th._loss be nelevant to rn economicaliy.
e.fFcient thx a p,~int we will come to
laten.
Hsvy'Drfr,kiny
External Medical and I'ension,
Costa per F.xcees Qu nce of Alcohul. -
Gsing undiscounGed values, each excess
ounce of alhoho6;,ie, t'hoae conaumed'in
excess of two reported deinka per day,
haq external medicaliand pension costs
of 50.63 and causes a loas of29 minutes
of life expectancy (Table 4:.columr. 1):
At a 5% discount rate, external rnedical
and pettsion-costs per excess ounce fall',
tu $0.26. Iat contrast to smoking, heavy
drinking increases all kategories ofcoeta
(at a 6% discounCrai even pensions,
because the large effects of early retire-
raent, which tligp'et-s pension and dis-
ability payments. outaeigh the,ahorter
life of drinkers. At a 1l??b rate of'dis-
count, medical and pension costs fail~to
30,16 per excess ounce.
Before diecuning the'other costs of
drinking shown in''I'able 4ue describe
the sensitivity of our estimates of medi-
cal and pension costs to different: as-
sumptiona (Table 5)r ~ For convenience,
the first column of'Pable',5'repeata the
results from Table 41 for a 5% discount
rate. ;ledicaband pension aoets are not
sensitive to tlte sourceof data (Tlable 5;
oolumn 2);, nor do they change much if
tve'compare heavy'drinkers with actual,
ahstainers and light drinkers rather
than hypotheticall controlled drinkei
.
(cutting back to two l eported drinks per
day among those',co:auming more than
that amount) (Ta3le o, coiumn 3); nor do
they change:ahen drinkings'not treat-
ed as a cause of dirsabilitl' reurement
(Table 5i,column,4).
Reatricting medical cortn to thn.ee
arising, from diaRnoees thought to be
reiated to poor health'tiabiu makes vir-
tuallv no difference 1o our estamat.ec
(Ilable o, calumr. 4);, impl, :ng', that the
.f4!thG:.lAtan'7.,.*989-vc.,28'I No 11,
S,c'a,_txanr r.~aly' 1607
t

TOWS-SSas" .oiF,/Mediand Mmitm Costa ph.leas Wkn)'pm.l.cess.0una e1.ElnenoV.19Aeewncoar. 6% d.oount
aas.
-- -
ttew A6Da7apnoen
Br... NMisn.! Neate+
esN-tm.rrYsw auhnry, MsawnWY.
.nd Llpht
L1.IIt4.c.
CO+.n'
9oa:ndt
101Ut 1
e6sta'.
.
.
ra.ettaa and :DSrw" cosu: f'I
bKebsro.,..tw.-unwro._§
Oat.
O.OT.
Otn
o:16
gkt4....s. 005 r 0.to 005 '. 0nJ
orourxrww" - 0102 - 001 _ oa - 002 _ 002
hory 1 o',
ftfr-nwMp.negrc a00; ocs -o:+s -0.OS 0.07.
wseone.akn~.,a -o0a -0oe -tc1ar. -0.03
ho.rpyfti asd CoMb+ POSb an .
deNSOUbe.lM
0.26
023
020
0!6
O
UM.pslsrqr elOpsffiY:I>M
ebesseUw.nur
-s-
-7
-ro:
-e
-I
'EMeOt of dNnqrq A.w+y drww bmrwrau0 d"a.. wm onw cno.aMhea ndd oonranttNatroe etMioon et
e+.mwt'6Meets. ve ro...cr o0 wrnr..el.ws.nu
ta~are.. sknr ooMS.`ffp/YAYwylw~Ry. wntS, o^Id AYNY CM. sr,ete.rs typ* r tw rWo oos:
+nrk+a. w tiiwr«+cs.
/V/e /IeYS 1M/ ft M1T7r" ,Ot aDAlnf~l vq epM OrlnkMf p LMftuINtClN ,TMN ~srrt+Mjf Ye W4d6rapy
"S/W VY+ w sr+rew,,.wn 4rt.r oartralrpg a+.o.,c.eon. To~tir ~99014 ?a.r ~av.e MmYlrp dtWsnc.a .n
-jot
awW66d'bp OAn14n0 r~ MdA6. uM delrtksrr ssemnpr: N nnat Ws.. ON ~-o ~, i equn veud t». -A 03:.
^E.e~ na ws a+ wMMas
Ttswe oi oow mrus tu.s m a.rntrqS
medica! coete shown in the GrsG column
srs laraely dus to differencen in medical
esa tba'are related to habits. In con-
trust, theaxterna3 mste oGrmoking are
senaiti.e, to tlie definition of relevant
iisediead ooats. suggesting that the
bro.der del4trition of ateoking effects,
may overatate, medieal' coste and& total
externalcoata:
pthee External Costs:-Although
oar ertimates include the adtlitional
probability that..Llriker w(11'.be +ultedl
in a traffic accident, they do notacsount
for the dea'.hs of innocent byetanders
and tf4ndrlnicing passengers inauch,ac-
cidentq. The Department of Transpor-
tation estirnatea that,about,7404'of the
22 t00peapie who died,in alcohol-re3ttt-
ed trafflc aecidenta in 1985 were not
drinktag;' Based on a willir.gness to pay..
for a hmnan tife cr<E1.66'miliion andlthe
esthnated'voltune of drinidng from the
199 NIIIS, the value of the 7400 lost
lives isti0.6g per excess ounce of ethanob
(Tabie 4, botto.n)., This 5gtre is low
seeawe it does not include medical, dia-
abliity, and suffering ooets of surviving
nondririltittg victims of aloo}iol-related
aceidettta.' (}n the other hand, the figure
is high to the extent that'noL:all drixk-
bng-related accidenta! are eaused by,
aloohoi.
In!addition, there are annuaAy'57.2
hilli+on of other eosta described previ-
ously herein,, pr(nciyally, costa of the
criminal juatice syetsm and property
damage in alcohol-reiatodi motor-velti-
o1e aeodenta. These coets add another
$0.35 per excess ounce.
B.nsRtvhy of Aesultr
Although i0:16 per pack of cigarettea
and 31, 19 per excees ounce of a3cohol are
our best eadinatea of'the external eco-
norniceosta of smokingand heavy drink -
ing, the oalues are sensitive to four fsc.
tore; discount rate; valite assigtted to
lives lost ia drun[tdriving-related aeci-
denta, amount of'underreporting, and
treatment of persons who die of causes
related to pesaive stnoking tnd fi>es..
Discounl Rate,-The: sensitivity to
the discount rate ia.more pronountxdi
with smoking, where the estimated sx-
ternal co4tg }p0131fi ha alm oat 30.~0 lawer
pv pack if we used'a 3% rather than a
696' discount. The sensitivity of drinkfng,
costa to distrounting,is muzh, less. fbr
smokingy conaumption'starta early;,but
deathexome much later than in the case
of drinking. The shorter the time be-
tween consumption and'deat'h, the less
sensitive the estimsteR are to
d(ecounting:
Doltar Value ofLife.-8ecauss tha
assumed value ofdife is on the low end of
estimated values, our estimates of
drinltnng eoeta are eonsercative.
QttderreDorting.-Assum»ng that
the reported level of consumption were
closer to the actual level of eonsumption,
would'ra9ae our estimates of the, exter-
nal coat, because we woulit intlate the
level of repotked packs and ounces ~bya
smaller factor when computing eosts.
per pack and ounce. For examp,tie,, had,
we assumed rsspondents reported 60%
of their actual alcohol consumption, cre
would only hava multiplied'& reported
ounces by 1;67 (d00160Jrather than 2:6'
(1001A0) to~eatitnate acttutl ounces; andd
the estimated aost;pet excess ounce
would be 6t196-(2.6Y1167- 1.6) higher. In
the ease of alcohoi, our cost estimate ie
conservative because the40% tigure we
used,is at the low end'of the estiraatea,
found in the Ilterature:'
Within-Family Coste.-We~ ignored;
costs o4'SG.23 per pack assucii:ted wnYh
dEaths caueed- by'passive smoking and
fires because we assumed,they vrere.in
the(itmiiy and taken!into account;by the
amoker. 13efining, these costs.as exter=
nal uould more ttiandbublp our estimat-
ed external cost of smoking:
Our estimates are rel2tively insent+i-
t'ive to other aSAumption.. Because the
extecmallcosts ofdrinking are dominat-
ed by costs aseoaiated with idrunk driv-
ing; such costs are relttiveIy inaensitive'~
tio, discuuntinQ tFigure): The choice of
deta usedlto estimste effects (HIE vs
2.'HIS) has little effect on the results,
Our estimates of the external eosts of
aleohol were madeperexcasa ounce. but
excise,taxea apply' per ounce, not per
excees ounce. Forty percent of total
consumption,represents ounces in ex-
ce se of two reported drinks per dky '(t+e
actual' dr.nks per, day, gluen our estiL
mate of' undsrreparting). Tb convert
our Rgures per excess ounce to Agurss
per ounoe, one'should multiply,them,by
0.4, reducing the estimated cost of $1. 19
per excess ounce to tD. 48 per ounce.
Our estiinate of the externaltcost of
smoking, SU.1b per pack,, is well beloww
t,h'e eurrent average (state plus federal)
excise and'salea taxes of $0.31 per pack
(i0:32 of the $0.8'7' are exdse taxa),°
I{ovrever, the S0.$7 tax' rate approxi
mately equals the, estimat,ed' extemal
coetof 50.88 if we werc to treat all lives
lost to passive snioking and Ares sa t;-
tat,.al wete. Dy'contrast, our ettintatef oUthe external cost of alcohol, f0:48 per
ounce, is well above the current'average
(ltate plus federsl) excise and sales taxr
esof 541.23 per ounce:n Chhe average
excise tax is taken acrosa distiUed spir-
ita, wine, and t»er, where the exclLe
taxes uv 90.26, 10.08, and130:09 per
ounce of ethanol, respectively.) Thus,
emekere probably pay enoughi taxes to
cover the neteosts they impose on oth
era, but heavy drinkere do not.
We noted in the introduction tltateco-
nomioally efRctent e.xtxse taxes should
at least covrr ezternall cost., By this
criterion, taxes on alaohollltre too,low;
whether cigarette 4xes are high,
enough depende on, oneb appraloall of
three other arguments far tauation of
cigarettes and,alcohol. (E)ach of these
argumente wrou)d further st'rengthrn
thecase for increasittgaiaohol taxe.. ) 1
The first argument tikes cognizanoe
of the regret expressed bymoet smok-
ers and their attempts'to qtltt: Smoking
tends t'o start irvad'oleseence or early
adulthoodi at a time whenindividhale
are not.vvell informed'and mey not ap
preciate the consequences of their ac-
tions.' Cigarettes(and alcohol) are ad-
dictive, so it is more difficult to quit Lhan
to avoid starting the habit. Because
over 65% ofamokers begin smoking be-
fore age 20 years"and sornR, evidence
6llM
itnder
sitiw6
crease
beconi,
Som
nalisti,
t8ste6
quit; t
the ecv
in life e
is rele~
cause (
efficien
perr p,ac
minutel
Ase,
dg+trett
epYreci
ing labe
adult sn
risks of
deter in
pet1eattir
A thu
modit~et ;: ,= :
lead!to r'. havior.a
Sappooe,
external
gretaasc
point of', ,
etill be w
is preter~
havlor d~
lnduC4d
couid'al'sc
[hanaLin
IDe6p:tq
ing our e! ,
thr differ
audeater
vEew, a it
Snerea6ei
tax increa
level, not
boot ieggir
fs especial
beer and
ously here
of etftanol;
!u. Stratej
ing or pro
may be'coa
Tb tiie d
alcohol ab+
drink in ba
drive home
cam lorsn:
by the drinl
tain what l,
stern from a
restauranteo
hnmes:
Ideally, n,
ers°to-fonc,tcoetb of dr,,
aic4lic,1: To 6
~th fines,
cenFee,juil~
Jrh.1A 1,14.n
1603 JA ti1.1. Merc* 17. 1069 28 r. rta, "
S; n Ta c- k4a n n., , e a r'

euqgedts that tHe' praportion: of tfiose
tlnder 20 years of AKe who 2lnoke ir rel:-
Fitive to taxes,"°` higher tnxee /ha?- de-
cr+eaeethe number r,f ~ridiv.ial:nls tt'ftn
become'addlcted-
Some may.cee this angumentas llater-
nnil!tic, liut it in not, i8 jiidget! by the
tastes of the indtvidual a'ttempting, to
qtntt those tastrr aryrtlably determine
the~:etonomicallyefficienttax. [fthelossin lifeexpecWcy of28 minutes perpack
is rele.ant to economic efflciency be-
catfse of latar ixgret, an ieconomically
effac'lenttax wiluld be on the order of Sii
per'psck; the estimated %-alueoftre 2R
minutee..
A'set:ond and'related reason to tax
cigarettes Is that many adults do not
appreciate the i riska. Deypite the w'arn-
ing labele tm'cigarethz.. 205E to'?Stlr of
adult smokere eayF they do not knota'the
riaks of gmoking:e A hig#ter'tax would
doter initisdon of'smoking, thus com-
pensating fornrty undervalued risk.
A third reaaon'to itnt addictive com-
fnodittea isdhat'such taxes are likely to
lead to a nlativelyunall change in be-
havior among those already addicted.
Suppoee, for example, there were no
external costs; no ignorance, and no ret gret assoeiatrd with smoking ; From tJn
point ofvieµ of raiaing,revenue; it may'
still be wise to tax cigarettes becauee it
is Preferable to tax iteme for which be-
havior does not ehange: there is less
induced ineff'iciency.° This argunient
rnuld'also justify'higher cigarette taxes
than at present.
Despite the: uncertainties eurround,
ing our estimates, in the'case:of alcohol,
the difference betxeeo the actual tax
and external eosta is ao large that, in our
view,:a strong caae can iie'made for an
increaee in federal alboho3' tances: The
tax inereaae should''occur: at':the federal
Itve1, not, the stat. levell to prevent
bootiegging across state lines. The case
is eepecially strong'for raising taxes on,
beer and I wine, which, as noted previ-
ously herein, are mueh lower (per ounce'e
oCethanol) than taxem on distilled spir-
its. Strategies such as banning advartis-
ing or'ptomo.ing negative advert9sing'
may be complementary,e
Tb'the'degree that e_xt.err.al'costb ef'
alcohol abuse stem from people who
drink in baxa and reataurants and then
drive home whi:e intoxicated', there is a'
case foran additional tax on alcohol sold
bythe dsnnk: Ws have not'tried to oscer-
tain what proportion' of externia] costs
stem from alaohol''consumed in barsand
reataurante relative to that congtuned in
homet,
Ideaily, society uolildta:c drunk driv=
en to force them to pay the external
eosts of drunk driving rather than tax
alcohol. To eometztent' society does so
with flr.es, suapeneion of driving li-
ren9es, jai: ser.tencea, and civtl liablliqy.
However, thc, pltrsent il gfia ;p5tem dDed
not make;,nor could itl-eaaonably make'
drunk drivers beer fidlv tne' exltrnal
ctiste of their actinn " r>pecli":1. ia ith.lse
caBeBlwhere:'there Ie a !0ssGt,Inllocent
lives.°'Fbr example, liAbility insurance
pdrtially ettleldn'dtvnk dtivers:
We' eltrse by considering, ta-o srgu-
mcntF' against hiSHer, exciee' taxes
Fir.it, tobacco and slbohol taKes consti-
tute a Ihl-ger proFortion:nf the income of
the poorthan of,thewelf to-do."" How-
evet;, alcohol and x/bacco taxee eaeh,
eupply only 19koftedera! revenues. As a,
reault, ratlierentall changes in the iildi-
vidual dncome Wx stru cture'could ireAdi-
ly compensate for the effect of increased
exeice't.axes on the disnibution of in-
come, if that' were deetned desirable:
Drinkers and smokers would atill pay
more,,but low-income individuali, als a
group, needinotpay molY.
Seoolxi, light drinketi ' may argµe
that they impose few olr no external
costa, but would unfairly pay a higher
tax burden. There, are two responses.
First, suppose, ttiat a: given amount of
revenue to-t5nance government expen-
diture'muet be raised from various tax-
e5::iitcludingCxcisrtaxes on alcohol. As
a group, persons whose conaumptdon of
alcohol is lielow'tlse population srerage
o1.7, reported drinks (over four actual
drinky) per day will'benefttfrotn shift-
ing more of the tati burden to alcohol
taxes and away from other taxes (eg,
payroll taxes).1 ln fact, of' adults who
drink, three fourths drink less tHanthis
amount Seeond; to tlie' derree that
hlgher taxes deter alcohol abuse, the
resulting decrease in external costs will
offiiet increases in the tax butdEn' of
light drinkers
Because excite taxeg imuat be propor,-'
tional Goconaumption and because the
external costs of'smoking and drinking
are' not proportional to consumption,.
there wil] not be, in practice, a tax that'
does not kave' aomeorto subeidit:ing
someone else. The',taek of,determining
how'such subsidies will flow falls to our
political institutions. tiGe hope our esti-
mates conttibute to more informed
decisions.
Thu wnrk wsaupported by grent RQI-H ti'tM2~
feom~ the'.* allons! Center for Health Ser.icae Rp.
erv+di end Tlchnoloay Aan.soratt
We tnaxrK'THom,u Vogt,.liD; Rol>ort'tau. PLD.
and'Rerwd Friedecan. PMD:,forsugyeetivm and
g+riddnce;: RatlPrt Attitr, .11D:. for help ,kith the
HuttaRiek.AppnfWmodet; KennsthWerner,..
PI:D: Charip.Phelp.i PhD..Janeaxahan, PR~D,'
Btidger Mltchell. PhD, and Jim :rnlth, PhD, far
cereful',rev/ew*;.$emedatteHer(iannln and JtnetHanle.,IFtS, forprogrartmrt'Jeg,and1 detamanagbe
ment: Joyce Pelerson PhD: for edltorial a.yta-
taace; . er.d ~. Stet7lfen, 6lareus, P?iD;, and', . Se}w+m.
Viaingre.n ror th.v suppnrt,, ccmmtnte; and
sdveou
Ratpencaa0
li L'S. Dept ofTh`srapcrtanan:: Pntn4' Ihxctno,
Pieeou Nuiorial HiFh.q 7tisffc Suity.Admirt;rtratfen, 19e6.
:- Lu:rRRl Sth~aritxr+RU.Rm~;+.lkanda<cioi
ta+ureA. a>mpanron of thkrre:ca,rnrmlr. corer
q,teroe.; , V b*qlJXrd'187N,I`.43atf:S'I:.
Y: Leu RF..i'Antr.ew,cktnEpub7,crt'v: t.~Man ~-r,
c'ne# dernud forr cirarMtee. J, NMlxb E'rc,r 1Gaa,
3 19'1'1tl6:,
t. lrr(dtSlot.utineaJ'!hei.aarnf'Srofn:', :D.KO H.
avv.ttk. tta,Natlnr,allr',emertnr:H+altfPtuV.
ttro. 1991.
~~ CLrG.HMld,RieL:.Apprmtor Urrr. ~ta-nnE1 At!.
la,nur, Centenfor 1lc.eaee Cont rol. I tiSJ
61 Pothnnan JA: FYdn+v! T~rrlirliry..eA Y. cYishIntrton.~lx; Btrbkingt Ihetltutloa, GF777, L4uner:
KE s Fbssible inereue+un the v ndrrrt .
tprti.ngetelgarette eonsumqtion. J ilnr Stnl,q!.tor 197A:75JS11-3S8'
S. FtfGt $p.paf R!rfirt.to /he !'S:C~np+ear un iN.coAo1 and H.nif AFnae t.he Set'vterry oF H.etftb a
na
Hw+Kaw S.nuet UrS Dlpt of:Heslth ,and llirnsn
S~ervic0l; JSAO.
4:. UlontrltKatna o('~Aar.Ntolda,. t.millhd end yer,
wEa in the llnited Statr.-1 sty1, In i('Roreuf fbh+ln.
rlon lteporf., Co.Ittnur lrtcv~, Spria Pdo.' US
D.ptofCammae.:BW~teuoftiit':Gtneue. tttlF', ~b:
151, pp,16SdR9.
I9. \'euhwe.JP: AAe.IRnfaraheallh'iinauranreax perimeat l.Qtriry 197k t 1 b27.
14. Brook RH, Wer.JE;.Dwlee.A-erv A. eU all
Owrvleref.dult health ata8aa rnaanursa nblded in
RA1:Db: Heaith Ineuranre Study. Med Cere
1l7a;17tetlp}t) -1,1I1:
12.. Px1tt DN"Qash benefn. der'short=ternt':pok-
txns: 2liirtl-6ce year. af data; . i 6i&&l8ei. Soc Se.
eur 8ru ttt86:6b4&
13, MIarntM111G: Rne:G; Ship4v W; Rt .1 Alcohol
andmorWttl: Au-aEap.d: curve.. L,rnrst 1aell.
1:6witeB:
id!,Dy-ar AR, StlmterJ, Pe4liLn, et al; Alcoholl
eonawmpUan.and 1T-year martalitr iattht'Chic.go liesttm Elattrnc Company, rtudy. Med
tt>HO e:.bso:.
13: tGr.Nty'AL, Fnedtnan,GD. 8le«laub ABr AI
enitJand fieRafits-'A' t.nyearr xaiser.Mnns~l-
ntsenperttmn. Axrnlrtts+xMtdlEIRla+EaBD 11;:
10. Harw'c.ut HJj Nsqollta.ro t)M. taiatfaneen P L,
etel: Eronomu Coau to'Sorwty rdAlcnkof and
D,~x+4A5r+.a>d~M/enfellt/nea Reesatch~TotanglaPark, 1G: Reanrch 24irtgie direktrbR 19+51.
17; EheprrdlDS,,Laekbaueer RJ: Sut+ri+ali~onua'
aoneumyli0[t:Ata+tapantaxMSci 1ata4~3D:a2S.~2B:
1S: Rovrard ~RA~: .Late nyt death dsdpon ~sxulywa, .
Irr-Proreedf%VSetiro.4 Lw.race Strnr;wtiuet en
SYMeew,ard Lhrintm A+tdfyeit Bak'elcy, Utif.
.r,nuv of~Ctl/fonnie Praea: ,1978.
ID'- 7}.r. Hmltk CowaeqrmcwqIl~tetr~mr'
S++nl:x,p. A':Slyers to tke SLryMn Gcne+vl (,rC.
Dapt ef Hwl th and Hmnan Seyteet,14a6:
20. TNe Thr BrrWa on Tb6ecco: W.asbltlgtaR, DC..
Tott.edo f ludiute,lai;:
Si: fMDIiC Ret.rane,t Fnrot' Alenroi 8a.rayett
wsair;n",tx, DiaiAed aplrttsCowtei:l at theUnited Butes,1fl6a:.
E4: Wamer RE: SatHep S.r,ohu Cipnac Adt~-
etli r<p and Pahtk /l/a1tA'. Waehingtan, DC, Ameri-
ean PublicHqlth Aaaeclatlen.:19N1:..
27. Ce.ntl:)t; Coetk D: Grosem.n lf: The eff.ets
of gwarnmmt regttlation an teenagp amolMg: I
Laur'Eran 1aS1;Le:o166l0.
24. R'qreernxanJ: Ercl.. 1Yases. ILpnlation: aad
tAe Dernawd Jor Ct'poretto. publteat I on p-744R-RG : Senra I:vnics. CaH: The RASh'D Corpcraslon;
i48d
26: Rareaer,r- A eontnbution t,o the Wxeorr oftu-
atian. icon.11t127~ie7-B1.
26 Ddaull Jt1. ltannfn4:L6; Htokman J K: Culyahil-
rtT and aoeoentatifl tv ,of:heepitalltad . ixtj ured alra
hol iimtwlred'dn.ren: A' pro.pectl,v study. lA?fA
t4Ge252ae110.1963
21, TbCer'&1: lssues'!n t.he twt.ton of c'q' arKtee.
in - lAe ClyanrtlEtcire ftis:. Cambriqa, M4t,
Hrrvsrd U hh,vrsitv Pru.; .19015, pt., 664..
29. P.oek 95t: Mauurement o( taa'progreesivity
A't,ptuation. Pu81u ft r>ente Q 1t193:11 L lt>tLl @ft
!9. . HarrisJE~ Im~reaain;,thn fHtenl ~eacrae u.:an ~
agaretus. 17JKLUr Caun 19g2tLi 17. i2ti..
JA':NA~ 11ar;pt 17' 19dB.-1k-M~251..td0~ 111
S^ TaK-NrennrnJeliet Sao9
