Jason Fletcher - Yale University

Understanding Heterogeneous Effects of Health Policies Using a Gene-Environment Interaction Framework

    Date:  10/25/2012 (Thu)

    Time:  3:30pm- 5:00pm

    Location:  Seminar will be held on-site: Social Sciences 111

    Organizer:  Matt Bradshaw


Meeting Schedule: Login or email the organizer to schedule a meeting.

    All meetings will be held in the same location as the seminar unless otherwise noted.

   *** - All meetings (unless otherwise noted) will be in 201-B Social-Sciences - ***

   10:00am - Jake Vigdor

   10:30am - Giovanna Merli (RH 114)

   11:00am - OPEN

   11:30am - OPEN

   12:00pm - Lunch, Faculty Commons - Seth Sanders

    1:00pm - Dan Belsky

    1:30pm - Joe Hotz

    2:00pm - DuPRI Students

    2:45pm - Matt Bradshaw

    3:15pm - Seminar prep

    3:30pm - Seminar Presentation (3:30pm to 5:00pm)


    Additional Comments:  ABSTRACT: This paper describes how using a gene-environment interaction framework may allow us to understand why health policies often work on some people but not others. A motivating example focuses on tobacco taxation policies in the US. The reduction in tobacco use as a result of taxation has been considered one of the most important public health successes in the past century. However, individuals continue to smoke at high rates and there is evidence of substantial heterogeneity in the responses to taxation. One of the key determinants of tobacco use is genetic susceptibility, yet important policies to reduce tobacco use have not successfully merged this risk factor in targeting interventions. I extend the standard economic framework that has evaluated tobacco taxation effects by presenting the first evidence in the literature that specific genetic polymorphisms moderate the effects of taxation on tobacco consumption. The evidence suggests that taxation only affects smoking participation decisions of individuals with a specific genotype—a polymorphism of a nicotinic receptor gene—and has no effect on others.