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SHIFTING SUBSIDIES
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).
Each year the world's taxpayers underwrite
$700 billion of subsidies for environmentally destructive activities,
such as fossil fuel burning, overpumping aquifers, clearcutting
forests, and overfishing. A 1997 Earth Council study, Subsidizing
Unsustainable Development, observes that "there is something
unbelievable about the world spending hundreds of billions of dollars
annually to subsidize its own destruction."43
Iran provides a classic example of extreme subsidies when it prices
oil for internal use at one tenth the world price, strongly encouraging
the consumption of gasoline. The World Bank reports that if this
$3.6 billion annual subsidy were phased out, it would reduce Iran's
carbon emissions by a staggering 49 percent. It would also strengthen
the economy by freeing up public revenues for investment in the
country's economic and social development. Iran is not alone. The
Bank reports that removing energy subsidies would reduce carbon
emissions in Venezuela by 26 percent, in Russia by 17 percent, in
India by 14 percent, and in Indonesia by 11 percent.44
Some countries are eliminating or reducing these climate-disrupting
subsidies. Belgium, France, and Japan have phased out all subsidies
for coal. Germany reduced its coal subsidy from $5.4 billion in
1989 to $2.8 billion in 2002, meanwhile lowering its coal use by
46 percent. It plans to phase them out entirely by 2010. China cut
its coal subsidy from $750 million in 1993 to $240 million in 1995.
More recently, it has imposed a tax on high sulfur coals. Together
these two measures helped to reduce coal use in China by 5 percent
between 1997 and 2001 while the economy was expanding by one third.45
The environmental tax shifting described earlier reduces taxes on
wages and encourages investment in such activities as wind electric
generation and recycling, thus simultaneously boosting employment
and lessening environmental destruction. Eliminating environmentally
destructive subsidies reduces both the burden on taxpayers and the
destructive activities themselves.
Subsidies are not inherently bad. Many technologies and industries
were born of government subsidies. Jet aircraft were developed with
military R&D expenditures, leading to modern commercial airliners.
The Internet was a result of publicly funded efforts to establish
links between computers in government laboratories and research
institutes. And the combination of the federal tax incentive and
a robust state tax incentive in California gave birth to the modern
wind power industry.46
But just as there is a need for tax shifting, there is also a need
for subsidy shifting. A world facing the prospect of economically
disruptive climate change, for example, can no longer justify subsidies
to expand the burning of coal and oil. Shifting these subsidies
to the development of climate-benign energy sources such as wind
power, solar power, and geothermal power is the key to stabilizing
the earth's climate. Shifting subsidies from road construction to
rail construction could increase mobility in many situations while
reducing carbon emissions.
In a troubled world economy facing fiscal deficits at all levels
of government, exploiting these tax and subsidy shifts with their
double and triple dividends can help balance the books and save
the environment. Tax and subsidy shifting promise both gains in
economic efficiency and reductions in environmental destruction,
a win-win situation.
ENDNOTES
43. André de Moor and Peter Calamai, Subsidizing Unsustainable Development
(San José, Costa Rica: Earth Council, 1997); study quoted in Barbara
Crossette, "Subsidies Hurt Environment, Critics Say Before Talks,"
New York Times, 23 June 1997.
44. World Bank, World Development Report 2003 (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2003), pp. 30, 142.
45. Belgium, France, and Japan from Seth Dunn, "King Coal's Weakening
Grip on Power," World Watch, September/October 1999, pp. 10-19;
coal subsidy reduction in Germany from Robin Pomeroy, "EU Ministers
Clear German Coal Subsidies," Reuters, 10 June 2002; subsidy cut
figures in China from Roodman, op. cit. note 42, p. 109; sulfur
coals tax from U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Energy Information
Administration (EIA), China: Environmental Issues (Washington, DC:
April 2001); coal use reduction from DOE, EIA, International Energy
Database, Washington, DC, updated February 2003.
46. Internet's start from Barry M. Leiner et al., "A Brief History
of the Internet," at www.isoc.org/internet/history/brief.shtml,
4 August 2000; wind power in California from Peter H. Asmus, Wind
Energy, Green Marketing, and Global Climate Change (Sacramento,
CA: California Regulatory Research Project, June 1999), and from
California Energy Commission, "Wind Energy in California," at www.energy.ca.gov/wind/overview.html,
15 January 2003.
Copyright
© 2003 Earth Policy Institute
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