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OECD Environmental Fiscal Reform in OECD Countries Presentation at the conference “The Consolidation of Governance and Entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic.

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Presentation on theme: "OECD Environmental Fiscal Reform in OECD Countries Presentation at the conference “The Consolidation of Governance and Entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic."— Presentation transcript:

1 OECD Environmental Fiscal Reform in OECD Countries Presentation at the conference “The Consolidation of Governance and Entrepreneurship in the Czech Republic and the European Union” Prague, 1 November 2002 by Nils Axel Braathen OECD, Environment Directorate

2 OECD Outline of the presentation Extent of Environmental Fiscal Reforms: –Removal of environmentally harmful subsidies –Use of environmentally related taxes –Fiscal reforms Some experiences: –Environmental impacts –Social impacts –Economic impacts The way forward: –Overcoming the income distribution obstacle –Overcoming the competitiveness obstacle

3 OECD Removal of environmentally harmful subsidies Very few examples of a systematic removal of subsidies due to their environmental harm. –New Zealand removed almost all subsidies –The Green Tax Commission in Norway looked at environmental impacts of many types of expenditures More examples of reform of subsidy schemes, to make them less environmentally harmful –Agriculture –Fisheries –Economic restructuring in transition countries Subsidy removal is now a priority area for OECD.

4 OECD Use of environmentally related taxes  Detailed description in the OECD/EU database on environmentally related taxes, fees and charges.  Is available to everybody, free of charge, at –www.oecd.org/env/tax-database  Will be supplemented by another database on tradable permits, deposit-refund systems, environmentally motivated subsidies and voluntary approaches.

5 OECD Environmentally Related Taxes and Green Tax Reform All countries apply several “environmentally related taxes”. –Fuel taxes –Motor vehicle taxes –Packaging and/or waste taxes A few countries have also engaged in (revenue neutral) Green Tax Reforms or Environmental Fiscal Reforms –Denmark, Finland, Sweden, Norway and Netherlands –United Kingdom, Germany

6 OECD Revenues from environmentally related taxes in per cent of GDP

7 OECD Tax revenue raised on different environmentally related tax-bases

8 OECD Tax rates on petrol and diesel, 1.1.2002

9 OECD Tax rates on final treatment of waste, 1.1.2002

10 OECD Environmental impacts

11 OECD Determining factors  Impacts of the levies on the marginal prices / costs facing the economic decision-makers.  Fixed rates per capita, etc., provide no incentives!  Price elasticities of the tax-bases, which i.a. depend on  Substitution possibilities  Short term => Technologies are given  Longer term => Impacts on technological change  The link between the tax base and the environmental problem at stake

12 OECD Estimates of price elasticities Significant differences between different studies –Time perspective –Cross-section / Time-series / Panel data / etc. However, for many types of energy products, values in the area of -0.4 in the short run and -0.6 in the long run have been found. Hence, a 10% price increase could reduce use of energy products by about 6% in the long term.

13 OECD Fuel Efficiency of New Cars and Real Gasoline Price in USA

14 OECD Social impacts

15 OECD Income distribution There are some indications that certain environmentally related taxes can have a slight negative impact on low-income households. However, little empirical evidence is available. The improvements in environmental quality should also be taken into account. Poor people often live in areas that are particularly affected by pollution.

16 OECD Employment impacts There is no indication that Environmental Fiscal Reforms have significant negative impacts on total employment. Is there also a “double dividend”? –Recent economic theory make it not seem likely. –Still, most tax reforms seek to reduce unemployment. –Very difficult to tell from – mostly lacking – ex post empirical evaluations whether this was achieved. Disentangling problems – other factors also impact on employment. What would otherwise have happened? Some available studies are too partial in the approach.

17 OECD Economic impacts

18 OECD Sectoral Competitiveness We have not found significant negative competitiveness impacts for any sector from current environmentally related taxes. But, this is probably largely due to numerous mitigation measures, such as: –Complete exemptions for certain products or sectors –Reduced tax rates for certain products or sectors –Tax refunds for certain products or sectors –Upper ceilings on the tax payments in some sectors –Recycling of revenues to certain taxpayers

19 OECD Economic costs of environmental policies The flip-side of the coin (the exemptions) is that the burden on other sectors increases – if a given environmental target is to be reached. The marginal abatement costs are not equalised between different polluters. Hence, total economic costs of environmental policy are higher than necessary. However, there are no indications that the total abatement costs are “excessive” at present.

20 OECD Overcoming the income distribution obstacle

21 OECD Expenditure on domestic fuels in EU countries (1988) Source: Presentation made by Terry Barker at EEB’s annual conference, Brussels, 10 October 2002

22 OECD A Czech case I'm NOT an expert on the Czech situation! However, concern for the impacts on low-income households seems to explain the full refund given in taxes on fuel when the fuel is used to produce heat. This lowers the incentives for energy efficiency improvements and thus leads to higher emissions. Better to address the concerns by modest increases in pensions, some subsidies for housing insulation, “non-wasteable tax credits”, etc?

23 OECD Overcoming the sectoral competitiveness obstacle

24 OECD Case study: the steel sector Sectoral competitiveness impacts is a real issue. A model-based simulation of a 25$ per tonne CO 2 tax. An OECD-wide carbon tax would reduce OECD steel production -- and related CO 2 emissions -- significantly. Also global CO 2 emissions would decrease. The production reduction would be much greater for integrated mills (BOF) than for scrap-based mills (EAF). Unilateral policies by single regions or countries may lead to quite dramatic cut-backs in the production of BOF steel, because there would be smaller opportunities to shift the tax burden over to suppliers or customers.

25 OECD Case study: the steel sector (continued) Most of the emissions in the steel industry are related to energy consumption. To exempt process-related emissions from a carbon tax would therefore not imply a big relief in the tax burden of BOF steel producers.  If the tax revenues were recycled back to the steel industry as an output subsidy, the decline in OECD steel production would be quite small. There could, however, be a significant restructuring towards the relatively clean EAF steel making.  Revenue recycling could, nevertheless, reduce global emission reductions.

26 OECD Possible policy approaches Integrate EFR with broader fiscal reforms. Phase-out current rebates and exemptions gradually. Use a two-tier rate structure, rather than full exemptions, for internationally exposed sectors. Announce new taxes and tax rate increases well in advance. Impose eventually full tax rates on industry, but channel part of the revenues back in such a way that marginal abatement incentives are maintained -- e.g. the Swedish NO x charge. Work for increased international co-operation.

27 OECD Current OECD work The impacts on sectoral competitiveness and income distribution are at the core of OECD’s current work on environmentally related taxes. We are undertaking a quantification of environmentally harmful subsidies. We encourage greater international co-operation.


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