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Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis

This study uses nationally representative data to analyse the economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa. Issues covered include the crowding-out effect of tobacco expenditure on household expenses, and the impact of parental tobacco and alcohol consumption on child...

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Main Author: Chisha, Zunda
Other Authors: Van Walbeek, Corné
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: School of Economics 2025
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access_status_str Open Access
author Chisha, Zunda
author2 Van Walbeek, Corné
author_browse Chisha, Zunda
Van Walbeek, Corné
author_facet Van Walbeek, Corné
Chisha, Zunda
author_sort Chisha, Zunda
collection Thesis
description This study uses nationally representative data to analyse the economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa. Issues covered include the crowding-out effect of tobacco expenditure on household expenses, and the impact of parental tobacco and alcohol consumption on child health outcomes. The thesis emphasises the interconnectedness of tobacco and alcohol use, and their place in South Africa's development and policy landscape. Chapter 2 uses four income and expenditure surveys to investigate the categories of household expenditure displaced by tobacco expenditure. The analysis begins with a simple comparison of differences in expenditure shares between households that spent money on tobacco and those that did not. Next, the displacement of household expenditures is estimated using instrumental variables within a system-of-equations. Confidence intervals for the point estimates are then estimated using a method proposed by Nevo & Rosen (2012). Results indicate that expenditures on education, transport, housing, and household goods were displaced by tobacco expenditure, however, alcohol expenditure was sometimes crowded-in. Decreased household spending on education could lead to reduced human capital development. Chapter 3 looks at how crowding-out patterns changed as tobacco taxes increased in the period 1995-2005/6. It uses a semi-parametric approach for the difference-in-difference technique developed by Abadie (2005), accounting for violations of the parallel-trends assumption. The results suggest a non-uniform pattern of adjustment of expenditures in tobacco-consuming households. While budget shares increased for some categories, such as food and alcohol, others, such as education, were crowded out. The displacement of expenditure on education is proportionately greater for low-income households than for those with higher incomes. Chapter 4 looks at whether parental tobacco and alcohol impact child health outcomes by crowding-out household food expenditure. Using instrumental variable estimation and mediation analysis, the study uses the National Income Dynamics Study (NIDS) panel datasets to investigate the lagged long-term effects of tobacco and alcohol expenditures on two child anthropometric measures (height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores). Although a direct link between reduced food expenditure and observed effect is not established, tobacco and alcohol expenditure are shown to have a substantial negative impact on child anthropometric measures. The study has three main implications. First, the dynamic analysis shows how various factors interplay with changes in fiscal policy, affecting household-level budgeting decisions. In doing 5 so it helps explain the effectiveness of cigarette tax policies over time, highlighting their continued relevance. Secondly, the study reveals possible unintended consequences among households that continue purchasing cigarettes after substantial price increases, such as deeper expenditure displacements, which policymakers must consider. Lastly, the evidence generated here suggests that reductions in tobacco use can be associated with a reduction in alcohol use, thus tobacco control could be used a tool for alcohol control.
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language English
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provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41548 Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis Chisha, Zunda Van Walbeek, Corné Chelwa, Grieve economics health implications tobacco alcohol South Africa This study uses nationally representative data to analyse the economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa. Issues covered include the crowding-out effect of tobacco expenditure on household expenses, and the impact of parental tobacco and alcohol consumption on child health outcomes. The thesis emphasises the interconnectedness of tobacco and alcohol use, and their place in South Africa's development and policy landscape. Chapter 2 uses four income and expenditure surveys to investigate the categories of household expenditure displaced by tobacco expenditure. The analysis begins with a simple comparison of differences in expenditure shares between households that spent money on tobacco and those that did not. Next, the displacement of household expenditures is estimated using instrumental variables within a system-of-equations. Confidence intervals for the point estimates are then estimated using a method proposed by Nevo & Rosen (2012). Results indicate that expenditures on education, transport, housing, and household goods were displaced by tobacco expenditure, however, alcohol expenditure was sometimes crowded-in. Decreased household spending on education could lead to reduced human capital development. Chapter 3 looks at how crowding-out patterns changed as tobacco taxes increased in the period 1995-2005/6. It uses a semi-parametric approach for the difference-in-difference technique developed by Abadie (2005), accounting for violations of the parallel-trends assumption. The results suggest a non-uniform pattern of adjustment of expenditures in tobacco-consuming households. While budget shares increased for some categories, such as food and alcohol, others, such as education, were crowded out. The displacement of expenditure on education is proportionately greater for low-income households than for those with higher incomes. Chapter 4 looks at whether parental tobacco and alcohol impact child health outcomes by crowding-out household food expenditure. Using instrumental variable estimation and mediation analysis, the study uses the National Income Dynamics Study (NIDS) panel datasets to investigate the lagged long-term effects of tobacco and alcohol expenditures on two child anthropometric measures (height-for-age and weight-for-age z-scores). Although a direct link between reduced food expenditure and observed effect is not established, tobacco and alcohol expenditure are shown to have a substantial negative impact on child anthropometric measures. The study has three main implications. First, the dynamic analysis shows how various factors interplay with changes in fiscal policy, affecting household-level budgeting decisions. In doing 5 so it helps explain the effectiveness of cigarette tax policies over time, highlighting their continued relevance. Secondly, the study reveals possible unintended consequences among households that continue purchasing cigarettes after substantial price increases, such as deeper expenditure displacements, which policymakers must consider. Lastly, the evidence generated here suggests that reductions in tobacco use can be associated with a reduction in alcohol use, thus tobacco control could be used a tool for alcohol control. 2025-07-31T07:20:56Z 2025-07-31T07:20:56Z 2025 2025-07-31T07:17:07Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41548 en eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle economics
health implications
tobacco
alcohol
South Africa
Chisha, Zunda
Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
title_full Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
title_fullStr Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
title_full_unstemmed Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
title_short Economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in South Africa: a household expenditure analysis
title_sort economic and health implications of tobacco and alcohol use in south africa a household expenditure analysis
topic economics
health implications
tobacco
alcohol
South Africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41548
work_keys_str_mv AT chishazunda economicandhealthimplicationsoftobaccoandalcoholuseinsouthafricaahouseholdexpenditureanalysis