Local air pollution and global climate change taxes: a distributional analysis


Autoria(s): García-Muros, Xaquín; Burguillo, Mercedes; González-Eguino, Mikel; Romero-Jordán, Desiderio
Data(s)

23/01/2015

23/01/2015

17/02/2014

Resumo

25 p.

Local air pollution and global climate change are two significant environmental problems which are interrelated. Some recent papers examine them together, but most of the relevant literature has focused either on climate change alone or on the ancillary benefits of mitigating it (in terms of air pollution). In regard to distribution, most publications have focused on the impacts of climate change-related taxes such as excise duties on CO2, energy or fuels. This paper explores the distributional implications of policies for taxing local air pollution and compares them with climate change taxes. The framework of taxation on air pollution is based on the estimated damage associated with the main local air pollutants, while the climate change framework is based on a CO2 tax. The case of Spain is examined, using an Input-Output model in combination with a micro-simulation model. The distributional implications of a revenue-neutral tax reform are also explored. We find that taxes on local pollutants are more regressive than those levied on climate change pollutants, because the goods implicitly taxed have a greater weight in the consumer basket of low income groups, even if the tax revenues are recycled.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10810/14268

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Basque Centre for Climate Change/Klima Aldaketa Ikergai

Relação

BC3 Working Paper;2014-01

http://www.bc3research.org/index.php?option=com_wpapers&task=showdetails&idwpaper=73&Itemid=279&lang=en_EN

Direitos

©BC3

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #distributional impact #environmental tax reform #global climate change taxes #Local air pollution taxes
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper