Environmental Financial Reform

With an environmental financial reform, we are using fiscal policy and taxation to redirect towards a sustainable and fair economy and society - by reducing subsidies that harm the environment and society, by placing our tax system on a broader basis and by making the consumption of resources and the burden on the climate more expensive. The additional revenue should be used sustainably for investments in the future and social justice. 

 


ANSPRECHPARTNER
Holger Bär

KONTAKT

        

Publicationtitle

Fair & Low Carbon Vehicle Taxation in Europe: A comparison of CO2-based car taxation in EU-28, Norway and Switzerland

Publicationtype Study
Publicationabstract

In order to achieve the European Union's emission reduction targets for new passenger cars and to make real progress regarding the actual emissions in the road transport sector, European countries have to improve and sharpen their political instruments at hand. There is plenty of room to align the fiscal incentive scheme with climate and environmental policy goals by using the available vehicle and related taxes much more efficiently. Looking at the 28 European member countries plus Norway and Switzerland, many cases of well-designed and effective vehicle taxation are available. This paper compares the different tax systems and derives several policy recommendations. For eight countries (Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain and the United Kingdom), a more detailed comparison among four example verhicles is conducted and a ranking compiled. While some countries have already introduced CO2-based tax systems and achieve substantial CO2-emission reductions, other countries' systems are still in need of reform.

Authors
Publicationclients Transport & Environment
Topics
Publicationdate 2018
Publicationfile 2018-03-FOES-vehicle_taxation_v19-clean.pdf