Reference

Céline Bonnet, and Vincent Réquillart, Strategic Pricing and Health Price Policies, IDEI Working Paper, n. 671, April 2011, revised July 2012.

Abstract

Because soft drink (SD) consumption is considered to be a contributor to the ’epidemic’ of obesity, there is a growing interest in evaluating the impact on SD consumption of alternative tax policies. In this paper, we propose a methodology to evaluate the impact of taxation of a food market taking into account the strategic price response of both manufacturers and retailers. We apply this methodology to the French SD market and simulate the impacts of ad valorem and excise taxes. We find that firms behave differently when facing an ad valorem tax or an excise tax. Excise tax is overshifted to consumer prices while ad valorem tax is undershifted to consumer prices. We find that an excise tax based on the sugar content of SD is the most efficient at reducing soft drink consumption. Our results also indicate that ignoring strategic pricing by firms leads to misestimate the impact of taxation by 15% to 40% depending on the products and the tax implemented. In the short term, that is ignoring positive long term health effects, a € 9 cents per litre excise tax has a small negative welfare effect (about € 1 per person per year).

Keywords

excise tax; ad valorem tax; tax incidence; strategic pricing; differentiated products; soft drinks;

JEL codes

  • H32: Firm
  • L13: Oligopoly and Other Imperfect Markets
  • Q18: Agricultural Policy • Food Policy
  • I18: Government Policy • Regulation • Public Health