Overview
- Editors:
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Claude Jeanrenaud
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Institut de recherches économiques et régionales, Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland
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Nils Soguel
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IDHEAP, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
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Table of contents (15 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages i-viii
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Introduction
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- Claude Jeanrenaud, Nils Soguel
Pages 1-7
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Concepts and Methods
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- David Collins, Helen Lapsley
Pages 31-48
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- Jan J. Barendregt, Luc Bonneux, Paul J. van der Maas
Pages 75-94
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Country Studies
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Front Matter
Pages 109-109
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- France Priez, Claude Jeanrenaud, Sarino Vitale, Andreas Frei
Pages 127-143
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Risk Perception, Demand and Taxation
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Front Matter
Pages 149-149
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About this book
CLAUDEJEANRENAUD NILS SOGUEL Smoking is a very common habit all over the world. The prevalence rate ranges from 20% - 40% in industrialised countries, and is dramatically increasing in the developing world. Smoking is risky and there is ample scientific evidence to support this statement. We know that smoking is a major cause of disease and premature death, in view of the fact that 3 million people die each year worldwide as a result of their smoking habit. Twenty years ago, the U. S. Surgeon General identified smoking as the single most important cause of morbidity and premature death (USDHEW, 1979). Tobacco consnmption reduces life expectancy vastly. Epidemiological research shows that people who have died from a smoking-related disease would, on average, have lived for an additional 15 years had they not been smokers (Warner, 1987). The economic analysis of tobacco consumption is a complex and challenging issue, which entails addressing many different questions. What is the economic burden of smoking and do smokers "pay their way"? How do individuals perceive their own health risks? What is the effect of the addicting properties of nicotine on the behaviour of a rational, utility maximizing individual? Lastly, what is the most effective way to discourage tobacco consumption? In this context, the assessment of the social burden of smoking using a cost-of-illness framework has played a central role since the beginning of the seventies.
Editors and Affiliations
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Institut de recherches économiques et régionales, Université de Neuchâtel, Switzerland
Claude Jeanrenaud
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IDHEAP, Université de Lausanne, Switzerland
Nils Soguel