TY  - GEN
KW  - Health
KW  -  Duration
KW  -  Smoking
KW  -  Selection
KW  -  Mortality
KW  -  Life Expectancy
KW  -  Causality
PB  - University of Oxford, Department of Economics
A1  - Adda, J
A1  - Lechene, V
N1  - This version is the version of record. For information on re-use, please refer to the publisher?s terms and conditions.
N2  - This paper considers the identfication of the effect of tobacco on mortality. If individuals select into smoking according to some unobserved health characteristic, then estimates of the effect of tobacco on health that do not account for this are biased. We show that using information on mortality, morbidity and smoking, it is possible to control for this selection effect and obtain consistent estimates of the effect of smoking on mortality. We implement our method on Swedish data. We show that there is selection into smoking, and considerable dispersion around the average effect, so that health policies that aim at decreasing smoking prevalence and quantities smoked might have less effect in terms of average number of years of life gained than previously estimated. We also empirically show that selection into smoking has increased over the last fifty years with the availability of information on the dangers of smoking, so that future studies comparing smokers and non smokers will spuriously reveal a worsening effect of tobacco on health if they fail to control for selection.
T3  - Economics Series Working Papers
UR  - https://ideas.repec.org/p/oxf/wpaper/184.html
ID  - discovery10140719
TI  - Smoking and Endogenous Mortality: Does Heterogeneity in Life Expectancy Explain Differences in Smoking Behaviour
CY  - Oxford, UK
Y1  - 2004///
AV  - none
ER  -