Review of Economics and Statistics, volume 106, issue 6, pages 1719-1729

Who Pays Sin Taxes? Understanding the Overlapping Burdens of Corrective Taxes

Christopher Conlon 1, 2
Nirupama Rao 3, 4
YINAN WANG 5, 6
1
 
Department of Economics, NYU Stern School of Business and NBER
2
 
NYU Stern School of Business and NBER
5
 
Department of Economics, NYU Stern School of Business
6
 
NYU Stern School of Business
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2024-11-01
scimago Q1
SJR7.553
CiteScore8.5
Impact factor7.6
ISSN00346535, 15309142
Social Sciences (miscellaneous)
Economics and Econometrics
Abstract

We find that sin-good purchases are highly concentrated, with 10% of households paying more than 80% of taxes on alcohol and cigarettes. Total sin-tax burdens are poorly explained by demographics (including income) but are well explained by eight household clusters defined by purchasing patterns. The two most taxed clusters comprise 8% of households, pay 63% of sin taxes, and are older, less educated, and lower income. Taxes on sugary beverages broaden the tax base but add to the burdens of heavily taxed households. Efforts to increase sin taxes should consider the heavy burdens borne by few households.

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