Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Fiscal Policy of Environmentally Sound Economic Growth Prof. Rumen Gechev, Ph.D. • The Fiscal Policy as one of the key instruments of the Economic Policy • Deepening conflict between Economic Growth (rising GDP) and the State of the Environment • Market Economy vs. Sustainable Development • The environmentally oriented Fiscal Policy consists of few main instruments: * Taxation * Fees and Charges * Tradable permits * Budget subsidies • The Taxation is among the most powerful and the most market oriented tools of Sustainable Development. • It is characterized by number of parameters, including: structure, absolute value, percentage level, differentiation, scope (exemptions), level of application (local, national, regional, international. Tax Structure • Tax structure is interrelated with the structure of the National Economy and especially with the Energy sector structure • The Carbon taxes in Denmark , Norway and Sweden these taxes are high but more industry differentiated, while in Finland and Holland are lower but more general. • Coal based electricity production in USA and Denmark is 50% and 70% respectively, while in Sweden and Norway is 2% and 1%. It explains why there are quite different approaches when selecting between CARBON, ENERGY or HYBRID tax schemes. • Poland relies heavily on the coal based energy production while Czech Republic, Bulgaria and Romania widely use nuclear electric generators. These energy source differences determine different structure and intensity of the Fiscal Policy. • Interdependences between the energy sector policy and the Fiscal policy (environmental taxation, subsidies, government investment spending) The Bulgarian Case The closing of the first 4 reactors of the nuclear plant would cause number of environmental , social and economic problems: * Extended use of coal based electricity production – much higher air pollution (SO2) and other negative side effects on the environment, including human health; * Extreme difficulties fulfilling the Oslo Protocol (1994) and Kyoto protocol. Possible financial sanction by the EU; * Energy shortages, higher electricity prices, lower competitiveness, higher trade deficit, etc. Taxation and Competitiveness • The Environmental Fiscal Policy (Taxation, Import/Export regime, Subsidies): Fully Harmonized vs. Nationally Differentiated Differentiation YES, but relevant to the common rules and principles, otherwise, such differentiation can be used as an additional tool for competitive advantages. Such “hidden” instruments are: a) symbolic environmental taxation; b) fixed, artificially low prices on nonrenewable resources; c) direct or indirect subsidization; d) tariff and non-tariff barriers, preventing from better resource allocation. Tax Neutrality • Higher taxes on pollution and natural resource depletion, but decreased taxes on labor and capital formation. More financial burden will be transferred to the heavy polluters while the investments in new technologies and improved products will be rewarded. Problem: Corporate and individual tax revenues are much higher (both in % and absolute value) than the environmental tax revenues . Revenues from environmental related taxes in % per GDP 6.0% 5.0% 4.0% 1994 3.0% 1998 2.0% 1.0% US A Ja pa n Po rtu ga l De nm ar k G re ec e Ita ly an y er m G Fr an ce Po la nd Hu ng ar y Cz ec h 0.0% Environm entally related tax revenues per capita in 1998 (USD) Japan USA Portugal Sw eden Norw ay Denmark Italy Germany Poland Hungary Czech 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 1400 1600 1800 The Kuznets Curve Hypothesis (GDP/per Capita : Pollution) • Main problem of discussion: The higher pollution level depends only (mainly) on the level of GDP per capita or the defining factor id the Applied Technologies and/or the type of Product? Despite the higher economic output, the environmental degradation has slow down in many of the highly developed countries. Pollution : Taxation • Industry specific or universal taxes? * heavy vs. light industries * vulnerability to business cycle fluctuations. During recessions, an increase of the environmental taxation may cause chain of bankruptcies. * Shall we fiscally tolerate the “inherited industrial companies” on expense of the new ones? How long and under what conditions the tolerance could take place? Can we apply the asymmetric approach EU-New member states? Specific restraints on the Environmental Fiscal policy in Eastern Europe • Lowered GDP potential, problems with the B.of Payments, Budget deficit imbalances, foreign and domestic government debts, relatively lower standard of living. • Heavy polluted environment – contradiction between the amount of financial resources necessary for environmental recovery and the severe financial restriction because of the economic problems. Political difficulties when giving higher priority to environmental spending on expense of socially sound programs. • Pressure from the EU for speeded up harmonization of the environmental legislation and the respective technical standards of production. Possible solutions • Debt to “environment swaps • Tax holidays and/or free land for foreign and domestic investments which transfer environmentally friendly technologies. • Using the environmentally oriented funding from EU, The World bank, EBRD, EIB as a generator for further attraction of private investments. • Downsized or even zero subsidies for the loss making public sectors and transfer of the scarce budget resources into sustainable production. Spending on Environmental Programs in Bulgaria • Environmental spending - 2% of GDP in 2000, the basic trend during the last years – slow increase; • 80% for operational expenses and only 1/5 on Investment spending. • R & D activities – only 1% of the overall budget of the Ministry of Environment. Environmental Taxation: Producers vs. Consumers We argue that much more attention has to be paid on the taxation on Consumers (importers). The market economy is Demand driven and the expected multiplier effect from Sustainable Consumption is higher than the traditional approach (“producer pay” principle). • Current marketing principles are in sharp contradiction with the prerequisites for Sustainable economic growth because now : the more you buy (consume), the less you pay; sales or VAT taxes are neutral to the quantity of commodities used (consumed); aggressive advertisement which often stimulates consumption of useless, health risky products; low prices on exported raw materials and energy sources, which force the exporting countries to produce and export more, i.e. speeding up the process of environmental degradation; Tax recycling • Direct recycling (back to the polluters) or Indirect recycling – first to the most efficient fiscal utilization *Debt retirement; * Public investment projects; * FDI government guaranties; * Reduction of other taxes, etc.) Tax exemptions • * Immediate inputs of fuels in manufacturing are tax exempt in Finland. The tax refund is up to 85% of the amount of tax on energy products that exceeds 3.7% of its value added. • * In Sweden, 65% refund of CO2 taxes when fuels are used in manufacturing industries. • Similar tax heavens are have been made in Denmark. • Germany and Spain have applied Zero implicit CO2 combined with heavily subsidized coal production. Taxes vs. Tradable Permits • Tradable permit advantages: * gives pressure on producers to improve their products and technologies; • It stimulates both producers with modern or aging technologies. “Modern” producers may generate additional income by selling the quota while the “Old fashion” producer may prefer quota than taxes in period of few years till the renovation of the production capacity • Problem: Tradable permit market is well developed in the highly developed countries. Will it be possible similar market to be organized in Eastern Europe or we shall use mainly taxes and environmental standards at least in the short run? Which is the best model for Sustainable development? • We believe that there is no universal model. Indeed, few key criteria can be applied when selecting the appropriate set of INTERRELATED Fiscal, Monetary and other instruments of the Macroeconomic policy: * Economic efficiency; * Degree of environmental protection: * Political acceptability; * Time dimensions (Long-short run); * Positive and negative spin-off effects; * Scope of the effect (local, national, global); * Control and monitoring opportunities; Japanese lesson • Seiyu, LTD – supermarket operator have introduced last ECOTAX intro-company environmental tax system • Principle: • * Reducing the company’s environmental burden by levying a green tax on energy consumption and waste generation which a converted into an equivalent of taxable carbon dioxide emissions. • * The proposed Tax rate is $0.80 per metric tone. • * All tax revenues will be recycled into environmental programs. • The fiscal policy has to be reshaped in correspondence with the criteria for Sustainable Development. The broader the scope of the reforms and the higher the level of harmonization on the basic rules and principles at a international level, the better the chances for mutual benefits.