Modelling the health impact of food taxes and subsidies with price elasticities: the case for additional scaling of food consumption using the total food expenditure elasticity
Tony Blakely, Nhung Nghiem, Murat Genc, Anja Mizdrak, Linda Cobiac,, Cliona Ni Mhurchu, Boyd Swinburn, Peter Scarborough, Christine Cleghorn

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that applying total food expenditure elasticity (TFEe) to rescale food consumption after using price elasticity matrices improves the accuracy of health impact models for food taxes and subsidies, correcting implausible results.
Contribution
It introduces the use of TFEe as a scalar to adjust food consumption changes derived from PE matrices, enhancing model validity across different settings.
Findings
TFEe values ranged from 0.46 to 0.90 in studies.
Without TFEe adjustment, models produced implausible expenditure changes.
Adjusting with TFEe reduced or reversed estimated health impacts.
Abstract
Background Food taxes and subsidies are one intervention to address poor diets. Price elasticity (PE) matrices are commonly used to model the change in food purchasing. Usually a PE matrix is generated in one setting then applied to another setting with differing starting consumption and prices of foods. This violates econometric assumptions resulting in likely misestimation of total food consumption. We illustrate rescaling all consumption after applying a PE matrix using a total food expenditure elasticity (TFEe, the expenditure elasticity for all food combined given the policy induced change in the total price of food). We use case studies of NZ0.4 per 100g sugar tax, and a 20% fruit and vegetable (F&V) subsidy. Methods We estimated changes in food purchasing using a NZ PE matrix applied conventionally, then with TFEe adjustment. Impacts were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Health Care Issues · Energy, Environment, and Transportation Policies · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
