Demand for plant-based milk and effects of a carbon tax on fresh milk consumption in Sweden
Huang, WeiAbstract
A hypothetical carbon tax on the carbon footprint of fresh milk products from animals (cow’s milk) and plant-based substitutes (rice milk, oat milk, soy milk, almond milk) was applied to estimated price and income elasticities for Swedish household expenditure on these products. Overall aims were to (i) to estimate fresh milk consumption patterns in Swedish households and (ii) simulate the direct distributed effects of a carbon tax on fresh milk. The results indicated that fresh milk consumption in Swedish households is affected mainly by price and income, rather than by sociodemographic characteristics of the household. The estimates revealed a substitutional relationship between plant-based milk on one hand and low-fat and standard milk on the other, while there was a complementary relationship between plant-based and reduced-fat milk. The effects of a carbon tax were simulated based on damage cost and price. The results indicated that introduction of a carbon tax would decrease the carbon footprint of dairy fresh milk, but would increase the carbon footprint of plant-based milk because of the institutional and complementary relationship between the different categories of fresh milk. Thus levying a carbon tax on fresh dairy milk, rather than on plant-based milk, would be more likely to promote climate-friendly fresh milk consumption.
Keywords
Carbon tax; Fresh milk; EASI demand system; Two-step estimation; Plant-based milk; Home-scanned censored dataPublished in
Economic Analysis and Policy2022, volume: 75, pages: 518-529
Authors' information
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG13 Climate action
SDG3 Good health and wellbeing
SDG12 Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns
UKÄ Subject classification
Economics
Publication Identifiers
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.eap.2022.06.011
URI (permanent link to this page)
https://res.slu.se/id/publ/117606