TAXATION, ENERGY & THE ENVIRONMENT Tax & the Environment Unit Centre for Tax Policy & Administration LAC Tax Policy Forum 3-4 July 2014
Taxes & green growth The OECD adopted a Green Growth Strategy in May 2011 Practical framework to help countries foster strong economic growth while preserving the environmental assets on which our well-being relies & to find new sources of economic growth A key part of the strategy is the use of environmentally-related taxes to incorporate health and environmental costs into market prices www.oecd.org/greengrowth 2
Environmentally-related tax revenues, 2012 Energy Motor vehicles Other % of GDP 4 3 2 1 0-1 United States Canada India New Zealand China Japan Spain Slovak Republic Switzerland France Australia Poland Germany Portugal Norway Iceland Belgium South Africa Ireland United Kingdom Luxembourg Sweden Austria Korea Estonia Czech Republic Hungary Italy Finland Israel Netherlands Turkey Denmark Slovenia Mexico Peru Guatemala Uruguay Colombia Nicaragua Argentina Chile Costa Rica Dominican Republic Brazil -2 Source OECD-EEA environmentally-related tax database
Environmental tax revenues : 1994-2012 OECD weighted average Weighted average of LAC countries shown % of GDP 4 3 2 1 0-1 Argentina Brazil Chile Colombia Costa Rica Dominican Rep. Guatemala Mexico Nicaragua Peru Uruguay -2 Source OECD-EEA environmentally-related tax database
Taxing Energy Use: A Graphical Analysis Energy taxation: Tool to influence energy use & therefore greenhouse gas emissions, air pollution, other external costs of energy use Source of many explicit & implicit fossil fuel tax expenditures Important source of government revenue Taxing Energy Use: A Graphical Analysis: Systematically describes taxes on all energy use in the OECD using a graphical profile Highlights the price signals sent by taxes on different fuels & fuel uses within & across countries Work underway to incorporate new countries, including Argentina & Brazil www.oecd.org/tax/taxpolicy/taxingenergyuse.htm
Energy use & taxation in Chile Tax Tax expenditure or rebate Tax rate (CLP per GJ) 7 000 TRANSPORT HEATING & PROCESS ELECTRICITY 6 000 5 000 4 000 3 000 2 000 1 000 0 Motor gasoline Diesel Rail & marine fuels: domestic Aviation fuels: domestic Natural gas LPG Diesel Fuel oil 0 200 000 400 000 600 000 800 000 1 000 000 Waste & renewables Other oil products Coal Diesel Natural gas Residual fuels - 1 000 Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013) Tax base energy use (TJ)
Energy use & taxation in Mexico Tax Tax expenditure or rebate Tax rate (MXN per tonne of CO2) 160 TRANSPORT HEATING & PROCESS ELECTRICITY 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 Gasoline: road Diesel: road Diesel: res., comm., ind. Diesel: ag. Coal: ind. Natural gas: ind., res., comm. Fuel oil: ind. LPG: res., comm., ind., ag. Other oil products: ind. Biomass & other renewables: ind., res., comm. 0 0 100 000 200 000 300 000 400 000 Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013) Tax base energy use (TJ) Natural gas & coal: energy transf. Other oil products: energy transf. Tax base carbon emissions from energy use (thousands of tonnes CO2) Other oil products Coal Natural gas Biomass & other renewables
Snapshot of energy taxation Effective tax rate (EUR per tonne CO 2 ) 350 NOR 300 250 FRA 200 150 CHL 100 50 USA MEX 0 0% 10% 20% 30% 40% 50% 60% 70% 80% 90% 100% Cumulative % of carbon emissions from energy Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013)
Effective tax rates on energy use Tax rate ( per GJ) 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 MEX USA CAN ISL CHL AUS NZL KOR OECD-W HUN SVK POL CZE EST BEL FRA JPN TUR ESP OECD-S PRT FIN NOR DEU SWE AUT SVN GBR ITA GRC ISR IRL NLD CHE DNK LUX Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013)
Effective tax rates on different fuels & uses of energy Transport fuels are most commonly taxed & are taxed most heavily across the OECD on average, more than 10 times as much Heating & process use & electricity generation are taxed at lower rates & are in some cases entirely untaxed Substantial variations in tax rates exist within each category of fuel use, based on: The fuels used (e.g. coal vs. natural gas); The users of fuel (e.g. road vs. non-road transport)
OECD average effective tax rates on fuels & fuel uses EUR per GJ Oil products Coal & peat Natural gas All fuels Transport 11.8-0.6 11.5 Heating & process 1.7 0.5 0.7 0.9 Electricity 0.9 0.7 1.2 0.9 All uses 7.9 0.8 0.8 3.3 Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013)
Transport fuels: gasoline & diesel Gasoline (road use) Diesel (road use) Tax rate ( per GJ) 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 TUR NLD NOR ITA GBR GRC DEU FIN SWE BEL FRA CHE IRL DNK ISR PRT JPN AUT SVK CZE OECD-S KOR SVN ESP LUX EST ISL HUN POL NZL CHL AUS OECD-W CAN USA MEX Source Taxing Energy Use (OECD, 2013)
External costs of transport fuel use Climate change Diesel contains roughly 18% more carbon per litre than gasoline Local air pollution Not directly tied to the amount of fuel use: fuel & vehicle standards can reduce air pollutant emissions from fuel use On average, diesel vehicles emit higher levels of particulate matter & nitrogen oxide per litre Congestion, road wear, accidents, noise, Not directly linked to fuel use, so fuel taxes are only an indirect way to internalise these costs
Fuel efficiency & diesel tax rates Even if a diesel car is more fuel efficient & produces less CO2 per km driven, this does not justify a tax preference for diesel Tax rates are set per litre, so should reflect differences in social costs per litre: climate & air pollution costs per litre are higher for diesel Gasoline & diesel should compete based on prices that internalise the relevant externalities: If diesel is sufficiently fuel efficient, it will still have a price advantage & consumers will have an incentive to choose diesel; Subsidising diesel via a concessionary tax rate provides an incentive for diesel users to drive more, exacerbating the rebound effect & increasing social costs
Policy implications for transport fuel taxes From an environmental perspective, lower taxation of diesel is not warranted due to its higher emissions of carbon & local air pollutants The increased fuel efficiency of diesel vehicles does not provide a basis for lower taxation on environmental grounds Country-specific regulatory & policy settings will be relevant to the question of the appropriate tax rates A gradual approach to any changes could mitigate the impact of any tax increases on households & heavy vehicle transport Working paper due for publication in 2014
Distributional impacts of environmental tax changes The OECD is analysing the distributional impact of energy taxes taxes on transport fuels, heating fuels, & electricity impact on households across income & expenditure distribution & by socio-demographic characteristics Emerging insights: impacts differ between fuels regressive for some, but proportional to progressive for others Publication of results expected in 2015
Taxation of company car benefits Tax settings relating to company car benefits & commuting can provide an implicit subsidy to fossil fuels & driving The use of a company car for personal purposes is a form of income, that most countries tax under fringe benefit tax rules If the amount of the benefit is not fully captured by the tax system, there is an implicit subsidy for the use of company cars
The benchmark tax treatment For 27 countries, we compared tax settings against a consistent benchmark, designed to capture the full benefit of company car use. The benchmark has two parts: A capital component: % of vehicle value (on declining basis) Reflects the fixed costs of company car ownership (financing costs, depreciation, taxes & registration charges) A distance component: EUR per kilometre driven for personal purposes Reflects the variable costs related to driving (fuel costs, maintenance, tyres)
Headline results The amount of the benchmark benefit captured by country tax systems was estimated at 50% (low estimate: 44%; high estimate, 58%) Most country tax systems do not increase tax payable for distance driven, meaning employees face no cost of driving further This represents a tax expenditure in 2012 of EUR 27 billion (low estimate EUR 19 billion; high estimate, EUR 34 billion) On average, each company car receives a tax expenditure of EUR 1 600 per year.
Policy implications for company car taxation Company car tax settings represent a significant tax expenditure as country tax systems do not fully capture the benefit to the employee of company car use The lack of increase in taxes from additional driving gives individuals an incentive to drive more, which has negative environmental impacts These environmental impacts are likely to be significantly larger than the level of tax expenditures (forthcoming ENV working paper) Revisiting company car tax settings can therefore contribute to fiscal & environmental goals Working paper due for publication in 2014
THANK YOU Bert.Brys@oecd.org Michelle.Harding@oecd.org Kurt.Vandender@oecd.org