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Citation

Valizadeh, Pourya & Ng, Shu Wen (2021). Would a National Sugar-Sweetened Beverage Tax in the United States Be Well Targeted?. American Journal of Agricultural Economics, 103(3), 961-986. PMCID: PMC9060537

Abstract

Sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) taxes have been proposed to discourage excessive sugar consumption, but it is unclear how high- versus low-SSB purchasers respond to such taxes. We first examine heterogeneity in the purchase and financial effects of a national SSB tax across different types of households buying varying amounts of SSBs. We find high-SSB purchasers are less responsive to SSB price changes than low purchasers but make larger absolute reductions in SSB purchases in response to the tax, given their notably greater purchase levels prior to the tax. Nonetheless, the economic burden of the tax falls more heavily on high-SSB purchasers who are more likely composed of lower income households. We then investigate whether the income regressivity of the tax will be mitigated if low-income households are targeted by fruit and vegetable (FV) subsidies. We show that depending on the tax pass-through and subsidy rates, FV subsidies can fully offset high-SSB purchasers’ tax burdens, and subsidy transfers are distributed relatively uniformly across the SSB purchase distribution of low-income households. Therefore, FV subsidy transfers would be financially more beneficial to low- and moderate-SSB purchasers because they bear smaller shares of the tax burden than high-SSB purchasers.

URL

https://doi.org/10.1111/ajae.12190

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2021

Journal Title

American Journal of Agricultural Economics

Author(s)

Valizadeh, Pourya
Ng, Shu Wen

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9060537

ORCiD

Ng - 0000-0003-0582-110X
Valizadeh - 0000-0001-9564-4754