TY - JOUR
T1 - Parents' Demand for Sugar Sweetened Beverages for Their Pre-School Children
T2 - Evidence from a Stated-Preference Experiment
AU - Yang, Ou
AU - Sivey, Peter
AU - de Silva, Andrea M.
AU - Scott, Anthony
PY - 2020/1/7
Y1 - 2020/1/7
N2 - Consumption of sugar sweetened beverages exhibits strong associations with weight gain, obesity, and dental caries, especially in young children. The aim of this article is to estimate price elasticities for parents' sugar-sweetened beverages consumption choices with respect to their pre-school children and to estimate elasticities with respect to nutritional attribute labels across sugar-sweetened beverages. Our results show that 1% increase in the price of fizzy drink, juice and cordial would reduce pre-school children's consumption of each drink by 0.80%, 0.51%, and 0.34% respectively. Such price effects on children's consumption do not substantially differ between high and low-income respondents but the effect on the children's Fizzy Drink consumption is significantly larger for respondents from large households than those from small households and are significantly lower than the price effects on the consumption of the rest of the family for Juice and Cordial. The marginal effects of demand with respect to nutritional attribute labels of sugar-sweetened beverages matter for Juice and Cordial, and are strongest for low-income families; however, these effects do not substantially differ between large and small-household respondents.
AB - Consumption of sugar sweetened beverages exhibits strong associations with weight gain, obesity, and dental caries, especially in young children. The aim of this article is to estimate price elasticities for parents' sugar-sweetened beverages consumption choices with respect to their pre-school children and to estimate elasticities with respect to nutritional attribute labels across sugar-sweetened beverages. Our results show that 1% increase in the price of fizzy drink, juice and cordial would reduce pre-school children's consumption of each drink by 0.80%, 0.51%, and 0.34% respectively. Such price effects on children's consumption do not substantially differ between high and low-income respondents but the effect on the children's Fizzy Drink consumption is significantly larger for respondents from large households than those from small households and are significantly lower than the price effects on the consumption of the rest of the family for Juice and Cordial. The marginal effects of demand with respect to nutritional attribute labels of sugar-sweetened beverages matter for Juice and Cordial, and are strongest for low-income families; however, these effects do not substantially differ between large and small-household respondents.
KW - Censoring demand system
KW - panel data
KW - pre-school children
KW - stated-preference experiment
KW - sugar sweetened beverages
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85079717373&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/ajae.12033
DO - 10.1002/ajae.12033
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85079717373
SN - 0002-9092
VL - 102
SP - 480
EP - 504
JO - American Journal of Agricultural Economics
JF - American Journal of Agricultural Economics
IS - 2
ER -