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Young people and alcohol: an econometric analysis
Author(s) -
Lundborg Petter
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
addiction
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.424
H-Index - 193
eISSN - 1360-0443
pISSN - 0965-2140
DOI - 10.1046/j.1360-0443.2002.00231.x
Subject(s) - binge drinking , probit model , consumption (sociology) , alcohol consumption , probit , environmental health , alcohol , wine , econometric model , regression analysis , logistic regression , psychology , medicine , injury prevention , poison control , economics , food science , econometrics , chemistry , machine learning , sociology , computer science , social science , biochemistry
Aims  To analyse the determinants of youth drinking behaviour within an economic –theoretical framework. The paper focuses especially on the effects of (a) having parents willing to supply alcohol, (b) living in a single‐parent household, (c) having parents who are currently unemployed and (d) having received education about alcohol, narcotics and tobacco. Design, setting and participants  A Swedish cross‐sectional survey data on 833 individuals aged 12–18 years was used to analyse the effects of the above variables on participation in drinking, frequency of drinking, intensity of drinking and binge drinking. Separate analyses were conducted for beer, wine and spirits. Care was taken in using appropriate econometric methods for the questions posed (negative binomial regression, censored regression and probit regression). Findings  Having parents willing to supply alcohol increased frequency ( P  < 0.05) of beer, wine and spirits consumption, intensity ( P  < 0.05) of wine, spirits and illicit alcohol consumption, and increased probabilities ( P  < 0.10) of binge drinking and participation in drinking ( P  < 0.05). No effects were seen from living in a single‐parent household. Having received education about alcohol, narcotics and tobacco had a negative association only with intensity ( P  < 0.10) of beer consumption. Having a father who was currently unemployed was associated with an increased ( P  < 0.05) probability of binge drinking but a reduced ( P  < 0.05) frequency of wine consumption. Conclusions  The positive effect of having parents willing to supply alcohol could reflect that these individuals face lower acquisition costs or lower psychological costs in consumption. It could also reflect a price effect, if the individual receives the alcohol free from his or her parents.

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