About: Ecotax is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 44 publications have been published within this topic receiving 785 citations. The topic is also known as: pollution tax & green tax.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors confirm both the existence of external environmental costs and the need to internalise them, with the aid of appropriate economic instruments, and make a critical review of the proposal, in the light of a number of criteria regarded as relevant in the description, design and implementation of these taxes.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors follow the tradition of applied general equilibrium modelling of the Walrasian static variety to study the empirical viability of a double dividend (green, welfare, and employment) in the Spanish economy.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors develop a positive theory that treats both of these aspects as endogenous outcomes of special-interest and electoral politics and consider the choice among three (endogenous) refunding rules: income tax cuts, extra public spending and tax burden compensation to polluters.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared different LCA methods based on monetization of environmental impacts, yielding results for 18 impact categories, including climate change, mineral resources and fossil resource use.
Abstract: Different LCA methods based on monetization of environmental impacts are available. Therefore, relevant monetization methods, namely Ecovalue12, Stepwise2006, LIME3, Ecotax, EVR, EPS, the Environmental Prices Handbook, Trucost and the MMG-Method were compared quantitatively and qualitatively, yielding results for 18 impact categories. Monetary factors for the same impact category range mostly between two orders of magnitude for the assessed methods, with some exceptions (e.g., mineral resources with five orders of magnitude). Among the qualitative criteria, per capita income, and thus the geographical reference, has the biggest influence on the obtained monetary factors. When the monetization methods were applied to the domestic yearly environmental damages of an average EU citizen, their monetary values ranged between 7941.13 €/capita (Ecotax) and 224.06 €/capita (LIME3). The prioritization of impact categories varies: Stepwise and Ecovalue assign over 50% of the per capita damages to climate change, while EPS and LIME3 assign around 50% to mineral and fossil resource use. Choices regarding the geographical reference, the Areas of Protection included, cost perspectives and the approach to discounting strongly affect the magnitude of the monetary factors. Therefore, practitioners should choose monetization methods with care and potentially apply varying methods to assess the robustness of their results.
TL;DR: In this paper, an economic policy instrument that supports the simultaneous achievement of both greenhouse gas emissions and energy efficiency in the building sector is presented, which is a tax/subsidy scheme attached to the difference between the actual emissions and a specified target.