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Journal ArticleDOI

Charging Drivers by the Pound: How Does the UK Vehicle Tax System Affect CO2 Emissions?

TLDR
In this article, the authors examined the effect of the vehicle excise duty (VED) on new vehicle registrations and their carbon emissions and found that the VED increased the adoption of low-emissions vehicles and discouraged the purchase of very polluting vehicles, but had a small effect on aggregate emissions.
Abstract
Policymakers have been considering vehicle and fuel taxes to reduce transportation greenhouse gas emissions, but there is little evidence on the relative efficacy of these approaches. We examine an annual vehicle registration tax, the vehicle excise duty (VED), which is based on carbon emissions rates. The UK first adopted the system in 2001 and made substantial changes to it in the following years. Using a highly disaggregated dataset at the trim-variant level of UK registrations and characteristics of new cars, we estimate the effect of the VED on new vehicle registrations and their carbon emissions. The VED increased the adoption of low-emissions vehicles and discouraged the purchase of very polluting vehicles, but it had a small effect on aggregate emissions. Using the empirical estimates, we compare the VED with two hypothetical taxes: a tax proportional to carbon emissions per kilometer, and a carbon tax. The VED reduces total emissions from new cars twice as much as the emissions rate tax but by half as much as the emissions tax. Much of the advantage of the emissions tax arises from adjustments in miles driven, rather than the composition of the new car sales.

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Posted ContentDOI

The Impact of Policy Awareness: Evidence from Vehicle Choices Response to Fiscal Incentives

TL;DR: In this paper, the role of awareness about the presence of fiscal programs in determining their impact on individual choices is explored, highlighting that limited awareness may represent a critical barrier to the effectiveness of public programs.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparing the Scandinavian automobile taxation systems and their CO2 mitigation effects

TL;DR: Despite their similarities, Scandinavian countries have adopted starkly different automobile tax regimes. The Danish system entails very high and convex tax rates with moderate CO2 differentiation, while the Swedish system has a very low tax rate as mentioned in this paper.
Posted Content

Optimal fuel taxation with suboptimal health choices

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce health benefits and active travel options into an optimal taxation model of transport externalities to study appropriate policy responses and characterise the optimal second-best fuel tax analytically.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbon Taxes and the Composition of New Passenger Car Sales in Europe

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined the effectiveness of implementing carbon taxes to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from transport, using the system Generalized Method of Moments estimator, utilizing cross-country analysis for the first time to study the impact of carbon taxes on the composition of petrol versus diesel passenger cars sold in 17 countries over the period 2013-2017.
Journal ArticleDOI

All car taxes are not created equal: Evidence from Germany

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on one possible such tax, namely an annual registration fee that grows with the CO2 emissions rate of a vehicle, and find that new car sales are affected by the tax.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Automobile prices in market equilibrium

TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed techniques for empirically analyzing demand and supply in differentiated products markets and then applied these techniques to analyze equilibrium in the U.S. automobile industry.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating Discrete-Choice Models of Product Differentiation

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors consider the problem of "supply-and-demand" analysis on a cross-section of oligopoly markets with differentiated products and propose estimation by "inverting" the market-share equation to find the implied mean levels of utility for each good.
Journal ArticleDOI

Salience and Taxation: Theory and Evidence

TL;DR: In this article, the authors show that consumers underreact to taxes that are not salient, and that even policies that induce no change in behavior can create efficiency losses, implying that the economic incidence of a tax depends on its statutory incidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does Britain or the United States Have the Right Gasoline Tax

TL;DR: In this article, the second-best optimal level of gasoline taxation taking into account unpriced pollution, congestion, and accident externalities, as well as interactions with the broader fiscal system is developed.

Climate change, food security and small-scale producers: Analysis of findings of the Fifth Assessment Report (AR5) of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

TL;DR: In this article, Aggarwal, Campbell, Edward Davey, Elwyn Grainger-Jones and Xiangjun Yao present their work in association with PramodAggarwal and Bruce Campbell.
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