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Income-expenditure elasticities of less-healthy consumption goods

Adam Hoffer, Rejeana Gvillo, William Shughart, Michael Thomas

Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public Policy

ISSN: 2045-2101

Article publication date: 10 April 2017

602

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to identify how consumption of 12 goods – alcohol, cigarettes, fast food, items sold at vending machines, purchases of food away from home, cookies, cakes, chips, candy, donuts, bacon, and carbonated soft drinks – varies across the income distribution by calculating their income-expenditure elasticites.

Design/methodology/approach

Data on 22,681 households from 2009-2012 from the Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Expenditure Survey were used. The data were analyzed using ordinary least squares regressions and Cragg’s double hurdle model which integrates a binary model to determine the decision to consume and a truncated normal model to estimate the effects for conditional (y>0) consumption.

Findings

Income had the greatest effect on expenditures for alcohol (0.314), food away from home (0.295), and fast food (0.284). A one percentage-point increase in income (approximately $428 at the mean) translated into a 0.314 percentage-point increase in spending on alcoholic beverages (approximately $1 annually at the mean). Income had the smallest influence on tobacco expenditures (0.007) and donut expenditures (−0.009).

Research limitations/implications

Percentage of a household’s discretionary budget spent on the studied goods falls substantially as income gets larger. Policies targeting the consumption of such goods will disproportionately impact lower income households.

Originality/value

This is the first manuscript to calculate income-expenditure elasticities for the goods studied. The results allow for a direct analysis of targeted consumption policy on household budgets across the income distribution.

Keywords

Citation

Hoffer, A., Gvillo, R., Shughart, W. and Thomas, M. (2017), "Income-expenditure elasticities of less-healthy consumption goods", Journal of Entrepreneurship and Public Policy, Vol. 6 No. 1, pp. 127-148. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEPP-03-2016-0008

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2017, Emerald Publishing Limited

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