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Re: Re: Re: Re: yet another US electile disfunction commentary
You are correct. Prices do not cause people to stop smoking very often.
They do discourage people from beginnging to smoke.
On Mon, Nov 20, 2000 at 11:16:40AM +1000, Rob Schaap wrote:
>
> I don't say prices don't convince some to quit the habit, but, by and large,
> smokers are addicts, and that rather defeats price elasticity. Also, as the
> public assault on smoking has been so concerted for so long, it is hard to
> say how much of the decline in smoking is down to the enormous price rises
> here. I do know that poorer people and women now smoke more than any other
> group in this country (indeed, young women are taking to it with gusto -
> perhaps tobacco's residual image as symbol of quasi-male power projection is
> a factor, or its new-found rebellious odour - that and the fact that tobacco
> is a form of self-medication for the stresses that attend lower-order
> employment - where boredom and tension (both inspirational of the craving,
> I've found to my cost) are paradoxically and perpetually coexistent.
> There's something very convivial about sharing a cancerous cloud, too. At
> any rate, my gut feeling is your thesis might not hold.
--
Michael Perelman
Economics Department
California State University
Chico, CA 95929
Tel. 530-898-5321
E-Mail michael@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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