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1 Patrick Fleenor, A Critique of the National Research Council and Institute of Medicine's Recommendation to Raise Alcohol Excises to Curb Underage Drinking 1 (2004)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/bpedxz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: BACKROUND
P ~RMarch 2004, Number 43
A Critique of the National Research
Council and Institute of Medicine's
Recommendation to Raise Alcohol
Excises to Curb Underage Drinking
By
Patrick Fleenor

Chief Economist
Fiscal Economics, Inc.

In September of 2003 the National Research
Council and Institute of Medicine (NRC/IM)
released a report titled Reducing Underage
Drinking:A Collective Responsibility. It
called for a comprehensive national strategy
to combat the underage consumption of
alcohol and, among other recommendations,
called for large increases in excise taxes on
alcoholic beverages.
Without specifying exactly how high alco-
hol taxes should be, the NRC/IM report said
they should be raised substantially and
cited the findings of studies that argue for
taxes as high as five times their current
level. If this were to occur, a family with
two adults who consume average amounts
of alcohol could expect their tax bill to
rise by more than $500 annually, even
after accounting for a dampening effect
the tax hike would have on consumption.
The NRC/IM makes two assertions in
defense of its recommendation: Underage
drinking imposes particularly high average
social costs, and secondly, Raising excise

tax rates, and hence prices, is a strategy that
has strong and well documented prevention
effects on underage drinking.
This paper examines the economic issues
surrounding the recommended tax hike
and finds that neither assertion is well
supported. On the issue of social costs,
the evidence cited by the NRC/IM in its
report simply does not support its claim
that underage drinking imposes particularly
high average social costs. Similarly, the
idea that taxes markedly reduce teenage
consumption of alcohol isn't supported
by the empirical literature.
Increased alcohol excises would, however,
place significant burdens on legal con-
sumers of alcohol and worsen existing
inequities in the tax system. Moreover, alco-
hol taxes have been found to be one of the
most economically inefficient ways of rais-
ing government revenue. Regulatory
approaches tailored to the underage popula-
tion, such as increased enforcement of mini-
mum age and drunk driving laws, offer
much more promise of reducing underage
drinking and related problems without such
undesirable side effects.

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