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SHIFTING TAXES
Chapter 11. Plan B: Rising to the Challenge
Lester R. Brown, Plan B: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble (W.W. Norton & Co., NY: 2003).
The need for tax shiftinglowering
income taxes while raising taxes on environmentally destructive
activitiesin
order to get the market to tell the truth has been widely endorsed
by economists. The basic idea is to establish a tax that reflects
the indirect costs to society of an economic activity. For example,
a tax on coal would incorporate the increased health care costs
associated with breathing polluted air, the costs of damage from
acid rain, and the costs of climate disruption.30
With this concept in hand, it is a short step to tax shiftingthat
is, reducing taxes on income and offsetting this with taxes on environmentally
destructive activities. Nine countries in Western Europe have already
begun the process of tax shifting, known as environmental tax reform.
The amount of revenue shifted thus far is small, just a few percent.
But enough experience has been gained to know that it works.31
Among the activities taxed in Europe are carbon emissions, emissions
of heavy metals, and the generation of garbage (so-called landfill
taxes). The Nordic countries, led by Sweden, pioneered tax shifting
at the beginning of the 1990s. By 1999 a second wave of tax shifting
was under way, this one including the larger economies of Germany,
France, Italy, and the United Kingdom. Tax shifting does not change
the level of taxes, only their composition. One of the better known
changes was a four-year plan adopted in Germany in 1999 to shift
taxes from labor to energy. By 2001, this had lowered fuel use by
5 percent. A tax on carbon emissions adopted in Finland in 1990
lowered emissions there 7 percent by 1998.32
Environmental tax reform is spreading, with the reform process now
under way in Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands,
Norway, Sweden, and the United Kingdom. There are isolated cases
elsewhere. The United States, for example, imposed a stiff tax on
chlorofluorocarbons to phase them out in accordance with the Montreal
Protocol of 1987. At the local level, the city of Victoria, British
Columbia, adopted a trash tax of $1.20 per bag of garbage, reducing
its daily trash flow 18 percent within one year.33
One of the newer taxes gaining in popularity is the so-called congestion
tax. City governments are turning to a tax on vehicles entering
the city, or at least the inner part of the city where traffic congestion
is most serious. In London, where the average speed of an automobile
was 9 miles per hourabout
the same as a horse-drawn carriagea
congestion tax was adopted in early 2003. The $8 charge on all motorists
driving into the center city between 7 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. immediately
reduced the number of vehicles by 24 percent, permitting traffic
to flow more freely while cutting pollution and noise.34
Singapore was the first city to adopt such a tax some two decades
ago. Although it was quite successful, only quite recently have
other cities, such as Oslo and Melbourne, done so. London is by
far the largest city to join in. Other cities that are becoming
unlivable because of congestion, pollution, and noise may also turn
to such taxes.35
For some products where the external costs are large and obvious,
pressure is mounting to impose taxes. By far the most dramatic example
of this was the agreement negotiated between the tobacco industry
and state governments in the United States. After numerous state
governments had launched litigation to force tobacco companies to
reimburse them for the Medicare costs associated with treating smoking-related
illnesses, the industry decided to negotiate a package reimbursement,
agreeing in November 1998 to reimburse the 50 state governments
to the tune of $251 billionnearly
$1,000 for every person in the United States. This landmark agreement
was, in effect, a retroactive tax on cigarettes smoked in the past,
one designed to incorporate some of the indirect costs. In order
to pay this enormous bill, cigarette companies dramatically raised
the price of their cigarettes, further discouraging smoking.36
The CDC study that calculated the social costs of smoking cigarettes
in the United States at $7.18 per pack not only justifies raising
taxes on cigarettes, it also provides an empirical framework within
which to do so. In 2002, a year in which almost every state government
in the United States faced a fiscal deficit because of deteriorating
economic conditions, 21 states raised cigarette taxes. Perhaps the
most dramatic increase came in New York City, where smokers faced
an increase of 39¢ in the state tax and $1.42 in the city taxa
total increase of $1.81 per pack. This brought the price of a pack
of cigarettes in New York City to roughly $7.50. Since a 10-percent
price increase typically reduces smoking by 4 percent, the health
benefits of this tax increase should be substantial.37
Environmental tax shifting usually brings a double dividend. In
reducing taxes on incomein
effect, taxes on laborlabor
becomes less costly, creating additional jobs while protecting the
environment. This was the principal motivation in the German four-year
shift of taxes from income to energy. The shift from fossil fuels
to more energy-efficient technologies and to renewable sources of
energy reduces carbon emissions and represents a shift to more labor-intensive
industries. By lowering the air pollution from smokestacks and tailpipes,
it also reduces respiratory illnesses, such as asthma and emphysema,
and health care costsa
triple dividend.38
When it comes to reflecting the value of nature's services, ecologists
can calculate the values of services that a forest in a given location
provides. Once these are determined, they can be incorporated into
the price of trees as a stumpage tax of the sort that Bulgaria and
Lithuania have adopted. Anyone wishing to cut a tree would have
to pay a tax equal to the value of the services provided by that
tree. The market would then be telling the truth. The effect of
this would be to reduce tree cutting, since forest services may
be worth several times as much as the timber, and to encourage wood
and paper recycling.39
Tax shifting also helps countries gain the lead in producing new
equipment, such as new energy technologies or those used for pollution
control. For example, the Danish government's tax incentives for
wind-generated electricity have made Denmark, a country of only
5 million people, the world's leading manufacturer of wind turbines.40
Some 2,500 economists, including eight Nobel Prize winners in economics,
have endorsed the concept of tax shifts. Former Harvard economics
professor N. Gregory Mankiw, who was nominated to be Chairman of
the President's Council of Economic Advisors in early 2003, wrote
in Fortune magazine: "Cutting income taxes while increasing
gasoline taxes would lead to more rapid economic growth, less traffic
congestion, safer roads, and reduced risk of global warmingall
without jeopardizing long-term fiscal solvency. This may be the
closest thing to a free lunch that economics has to offer." Mankiw
could also have added that it would reduce the military expenditures
associated with ensuring access to Middle Eastern oil.41
The Economist has recognized the advantage of environmental
tax shifting and endorses it strongly: "On environmental grounds,
never mind energy security, America taxes gasoline too lightly.
Better than a one-off increase, a politically more feasible idea,
and desirable in its own terms, would be a long-term plan to shift
taxes from incomes to emissions of carbon." In Europe and the United
States, polls indicate that at least 70 percent of voters support
environmental tax reform once it is explained to them.42
ENDNOTES
30. Redefining Progress, The Economists' Statement on Climate Change
(Oakland, CA: 1997).
31. David Malin Roodman, "Environmental Tax Shifts Multiplying,"
in Lester R. Brown et al., Vital Signs 2000 (New York: W.W. Norton
& Company, 2000), pp. 138-39. 3
2. Ibid.; second wave and Finland from European Environment Agency
(EEA), Environmental Taxes: Recent Developments in Tools for Integration,
Environmental Issues Series No. 18 (Copenhagen, November 2000);
Germany from German Federal Environment Ministry, "Environmental
Effects of the Ecological Tax Reform," at www.bmu.de/english/topics/
oekosteuer/oekosteuer_environment.php, January 2002.
33. EEA, op. cit. note 32; U.S. chlorofluorocarbon tax from Elizabeth
Cook, Ozone Protection in the United States: Elements of Success
(Washington, DC: World Resources Institute, 1996); city of Victoria
from David Malin Roodman, "Environmental Taxes Spread," in Lester
R. Brown et al., Vital Signs 1996 (New York: W.W. Norton & Company,
1996), p. 114-15.
34. Tom Miles, "London Drivers to Pay UK's First Congestion Tax,"
Reuters, 28 February 2002; Randy Kennedy, "The Day The Traffic Disappeared,"
New York Times Magazine, 20 April 2003, pp. 42-45.
35. Miles, op. cit. note 34.
36. USDA, ERS, "Cigarette Price Increase Follows Tobacco Pact,"
Agricultural Outlook, January-February 1999.
37. CDC, op. cit. note 23; Campaign for Tobacco-Free Kids et al.,
Show Us the Money: A Report on the States' Allocation of the Tobacco
Settlement Dollars (Washington, DC: January 2003); New York from
Jodi Wilgoren, "Facing New Costs, Some Smokers Say 'Enough'," New
York Times, 17 July 2002.
38. Peter P. Wrany and Kai Schlegelmilch, "The Ecological Tax Reform
in Germany," prepared for the UN/OECD Workshop on Enhancing the
Environment by Reforming Energy Prices, Pruhonice, Czech Republic,
14-16 June 2000.
39. Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, European
Commission, and EEA, Environmentally Related Taxes Database, at
www.oecd.org/env/tax-database, updated 13 May 2003.
40. "BTM Predicts Continued Growth for Wind Industry," op. cit.
note 3, p. 8.
41. N. Gregory Mankiw, "Gas Tax Now!" Fortune, 24 May 1999, pp.
60-64.
42. "Addicted to Oil," The Economist, 15 December 2001; environmental
tax support from David Malin Roodman, The Natural Wealth of Nations
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 1998), p. 243.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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