Ecotax
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ecotax, short for Ecological taxation, can refer to:
- A fiscal policy that introduces taxes intended to promote ecologically sustainable activities via economic incentives. Such a policy can complement or avert the need for regulatory approaches. Often, such a policy intends to maintain overall tax revenue by proportionately reducing other taxes, e.g. on human labor and renewable resources, in which case it is known as the green tax shift towards ecological taxation.
- The Pigovian taxes that are introduced by such a policy - see below.
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[edit] Taxes affected
Examples of taxes which could be lowered by a green tax shift:
- Payroll, income, and (to a lesser extent) sales taxes.
- Corporate taxes (taxes on investment and entrepreneurship).
- Property taxes on buildings and other infrastructure.
Examples of ecotaxes which could be implemented or increased:
- Carbon taxes on the use of fossil fuels by greenhouse gases produced. Old hydrocarbon taxes don't valorate the GHG production.
- Severance taxes on the extraction of mineral, energy, and forestry products.
- Licence fees for fishing and hunting.
- Specific taxes on technologies and products which are associated with substantial negative externalities.
- Waste disposal taxes and refundable fees.
- Taxes on effluents, pollution and other hazardous wastes.
- Site value taxes on the unimproved value of land.
[edit] General remarks
The object of a green tax shift is often to implement a "full cost accounting", using fiscal policy to internalize market distorting externalities, which leads to sustainable wealth creation.
Tax shifting usually includes balancing taxation levels to be revenue-neutral for government and to maintain overall progressivity.
Basic economic theory recognizes the existence of externalities and their potential negative effects. To the extent that green taxes correct for externalities such as pollution, they correspond with mainstream economic theory. In practice, however, setting the correct taxation level or the tax collection system needed to do so is difficult, and may lead to further distortions or unintended consequences.
Taxes on consumption may take the feebate approach advocated by Amory Lovins in which additional fees on less sustainable products — such as sport utility vehicles — are pooled to fund subsidies on more sustainable alternatives — such as hybrid electric vehicles.
[edit] Progressive or Regressive?
Some green tax shift proposals have been criticized as being fiscally regressive (a tax with a marginal rate that decreases as the taxpayer's income increases). Taxing negative externalities usually entails exerting a burden on consumption, and since the poor consume more and save or invest less as a share of their income, any shift towards consumption taxes can be regressive. In 2004, research by the Policy Studies Institute and Joseph Rowntree Foundation seemed to confirm this view.[1]
However, conventional regulatory approaches can affect prices in much the same way, while lacking the revenue-recycling potential of ecotaxes. Moreover, correctly assessing distributive impact of any tax shift requires an analysis of the specific instrument design features. For example, an ecotax can have a "lifeline" design, in which modest consumption levels are priced relatively low (even zero, in the case of water), and higher consumption levels are priced at a higher rate. Furthermore, an ecotax policy package can include revenue recycling to reduce or eliminate any regressivity; an increase in an ecotax could be more than offset by a decrease in a (regressive) payroll or consumption tax. Some proponents claim a second benefit of increased employment or lower health care costs as the market and society adjust to the new fiscal policy (these claims, as with the claim "tax cuts create jobs," are often difficult to prove or disprove even after the fact).
Furthermore, pollution and other forms of environmental harm are often felt more acutely by the poor, who cannot "buy their way out" of being receptors of air pollution, water pollution, etc. Such losses, although externalities, have real economic welfare impacts. Thus by reducing environmental harm, such instruments have a progressive effect.
[edit] Ecotax policies enacted
| Environmental Law |
|---|
| Eco-taxes |
| Environmental impact assessment |
| Intergenerational Equity |
| International environmental law |
| Polluter pays principle |
| Precautionary principle |
| Public trust doctrine |
| Sustainable development |
An ecotax has been enacted in Germany by means of three laws in 1998, 1999 and 2002. The first introduced a tax on electricity and petroleum, at variable rates based on environmental considerations; renewable sources of electricity are not taxed. The second adjusted the taxes to favor efficient conventional power plants. The third increased the tax on petroleum. At the same time, income taxes were reduced proportionally so that the total tax burden remained constant.
[edit] Registration taxes
The Netherlands, Portugal, UK and Finland have introduced differentiations into their car registration taxes to encourage car buyers to opt for the cleanest car models.
In the Netherlands, the new registration taxes, payable when a car is sold to its first buyer, can earn the owner of a hybrid a discount up to €6000.
Austria has had a registration tax based on fuel consumption for several years.
See also : Vehicle registration plate
[edit] See also
- Electronic Waste Recycling Fee
- Energy Tax Act
- Environmental crime
- Feebate
- Free-market environmentalism
- Green politics
- Pigovian tax
- Sin Tax
[edit] References
[edit] External links
- Redefining Progress
- Sightline Institute's research and resources on green taxes
- Creative Taxing Can Save the Environment
- Fiscallygreen.ca
- Earthrights.net
- A Distributional Analysis of Green Tax Reforms - Gilbert E. Metcalf
- WorldMoralMovement.org - Green tax as part of a moral tax code
- noe21 - capacity and action centre promoting solutions to global climate change
- GreenTaxSwitch.com - campaign by the Liberal Democrats in the UK for a switch to green taxes
- STERN REVIEW: The Economics of Climate Change - An executive summary of a report by economist Nicholas Stern (27pg pdf file)
- BBC article on Stern's Report
- Market-Based Instruments for Environment and Related Policy Purposes
- Konrad Pola on Green Policy as a Secondary Motive in Taxation

