Effects of beverage alcohol price and tax levels on drinking: a meta‐analysis of 1003 estimates from 112 studies
University of Florida · Florida College
Abstract
We conducted a systematic review of studies examining relationships between measures of beverage alcohol tax or price levels and alcohol sales or self-reported drinking. A total of 112 studies of alcohol tax or price effects were found, containing 1003 estimates of the tax/price-consumption relationship.
Studies included analyses of alternative outcome measures, varying subgroups of the population, several statistical models, and using different units of analysis. Multiple estimates were coded from each study, along with numerous study characteristics. Using reported estimates, standard errors, t-ratios, sample sizes and other statistics, we calculated the partial correlation for the relationship between alcohol price or tax and sales or drinking measures for each major model or subgroup reported within each study. Random-effects models were used to combine studies for inverse variance weighted overall estimates of the magnitude and significance of the relationship between alcohol tax/price and drinking.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 38.70
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 96
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Alcohol
- Unit of alcohol
- Econometrics
- Meta-analysis
- Wine
- Alcohol consumption
- Economics
- Statistics
- Good health and well-being