Comparing the Scandinavian automobile taxation systems and their CO₂ mitigation effects

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. In Norway, tax rates are high and convex with strong CO₂ differentiation and total exemptions for zero emission vehicles, even from value added tax. Sweden practices feebates – CO₂ dependent subsidization along with moderate taxation. Relying on a disaggregate discrete choice model of automobile purchase, we simulate the demand for passenger cars as of 2016 in Norway under a set of conditions resembling, respectively, the Danish, Norwegian or Swedish fiscal incentives before and after recent reforms. In all cases, implications are derived in terms of energy technology market shares, average type approval CO₂ emission rates, and aggregate fiscal revenue. The automobile taxation system is seen to have remarkable impacts on all three accounts. In essence, among the three jurisdictions examined, the Norwegian fiscal regime has by far the strongest CO₂ abatement effect. The Danish system is less effective in terms of CO₂ abatement, but provides twice as much government revenue. The Swedish feebate strategy is by far the least effective in terms of both CO₂ mitigation and revenue collection.

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    • © 2021 The Author(s). Published with license by Taylor and Francis Group, LLC. Abstract reprinted with permission of Taylor & Francis.
  • Authors:
    • Østli, Vegard
    • Fridstrøm, Lasse
    • Kristensen, Niels Buus
    • Lindberg, Gunnar
  • Publication Date: 2022-9

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  • English

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  • Accession Number: 01863030
  • Record Type: Publication
  • Files: TRIS
  • Created Date: Oct 31 2022 10:20AM