Author Topic: Study: Seattle's Soda Tax Has Been Great for…Beer Sales?  (Read 396 times)

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Online Kamaji

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Study: Seattle's Soda Tax Has Been Great for…Beer Sales?
« on: February 13, 2022, 12:06:49 am »
Study: Seattle's Soda Tax Has Been Great for…Beer Sales?

The substitution effect is real.

By Baylen Linnekin
February 12, 2022

A new study is pouring cold beer on Seattle's soda tax. The study, published in the peer-reviewed journal PLoS ONE, reveals that since the city I call home adopted a soda tax in 2018, residents have swapped out soda and replaced that soda with beer. Pointedly, the study says Seattle's soda tax "induced" consumers to buy more beer.

"The good people of Seattle responded to a tax on sugary drinks by buying more beer," Christopher Snowdon, director of Lifestyle Economics at the Institute of Economic Affairs and a leading critic of the nanny state, tweeted after the study's release.

The PLoS study, by University of Illinois-Chicago researchers Lisa M. Powell and Julien Lader, compared sales of beer in Seattle both before and since adoption of the soda tax with comparable sales in nearby Portland, Oregon, which has no soda tax.

"At two-years post-tax implementation, [the] volume sold of beer in Seattle relative to Portland increased by 7%," the authors report. Though supporters of soda taxes claim (largely without evidence) that they're a successful tool to combat obesity, the authors of the PLoS study note that the dangers of "excess alcohol consumption [include] higher risk of motor accidents/deaths, liver cirrhosis, sexually transmitted diseases, crime and violence, and workplace accidents." Also: obesity.

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Source:  https://reason.com/2022/02/12/study-seattles-soda-tax-has-been-great-forbeer-sales/