The Effect of Smoking in Young Adulthood on Smoking Later in Life: Evidence based on the Vietnam Era Draft Lottery

Daniel Eisenberg, University of Michigan
Brian Rowe, University of Michigan

Abstract

An important, unresolved question for health policymakers and consumers is whether cigarette smoking in young adulthood has lasting effects into later adulthood. The Vietnam era draft lottery offers an opportunity to address this question, because it randomly assigned young men to be more likely to experience conditions favoring cigarette consumption, including highly subsidized prices. Using this natural experiment, we find that military service increased the probability of smoking by 35 percentage points as of 1978-80, when men in the relevant cohorts were aged 25-30, but later in adulthood this effect was substantially attenuated and did not lead to large negative health effects.

Recommended Citation

Daniel Eisenberg and Brian Rowe (2009) "The Effect of Smoking in Young Adulthood on Smoking Later in Life: Evidence based on the Vietnam Era Draft Lottery," Forum for Health Economics & Policy: Vol. 12: Iss. 2 (Smoking), Article 4.
http://www.bepress.com/fhep/12/2/4

 
 
 
 

ISSN: 1558-9544 ©1999-2009 The Berkeley Electronic Press™ All rights reserved.

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