Are fee-and-dividend schemes the savior of environmental taxation? Analyses of how different revenue use alternatives affect public support for Sweden's air passenger tax
Journal article, 2022

This article studies if, how, and why different revenue uses affect public attitudes to environmental taxation. More specifically, using a large-scale (N = 4292) randomized survey experiment with a 2 × 3 factorial design, the article analyses how attitudes towards a proposed increase in the current air passenger tax in Sweden are altered when combining a tax increase with three different suggestions for revenue use. The increasingly popular fee-and-dividend solution, where revenues are distributed back to the public, thus decreasing negative distributive tax effects, is compared with two additional revenue uses: unspecified government spending on welfare services, and re-investment of revenues into aviation biofuels. Our results show that, although some of the commonly used independent variables such as climate concern, personal norms and political-ideological orientation are significant in determining policy attitudes, varying both tax level and revenue use also tangibly affects how a policy proposal is received. Interestingly, however, the fee-and-dividend approach does not yield the most positive policy attitudes. Rather, directing the revenues to fund an increased use of biofuels for aviation is the alternative that most clearly drives positive attitudes to this policy, and is also the alternative that is perceived as the most effective and fair in both the high tax and the low tax alternatives.

Aviation

Tax

Climate change

Policy

Fee-and-dividend

Author

Simon Matti

Luleå University of Technology

University of Gothenburg

Jonas Nässén

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Jörgen Larsson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Physical Resource Theory

Environmental Science and Policy

1462-9011 (ISSN) 18736416 (eISSN)

Vol. 132 181-189

On track to climate neutral long-distance travel 2045 - technology, travel patterns, high-altitude impact

VINNOVA (2019-03233), 2019-11-05 -- 2023-06-30.

Subject Categories

Economics

Public Administration Studies

Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalization Studies)

DOI

10.1016/j.envsci.2022.02.024

More information

Latest update

3/16/2022