Taxes on Fuel and Vehicles
Taxes on Fuel and Vehicles
The average cost of extracting, transporting, and refining gasoline and diesel fuel in 2006 was $0.53 per liter ($2.01 per gal) for gas and $0.59 per liter ($2.23 per gal) for diesel. [1] Average prices at the pump, however, ranged from $0.02 to $1.90 per liter ($0.08 to $7.19 per gal) in different countries, depending on fuel subsidies or taxes. Countries subsidizing fuel are, in general, major oil exporters. Most other countries tax fuels, often at rates higher than other goods.
Taxes on fuels are only the beginning of revenue collection. Supplemental taxes on vehicles are nearly universal, although there is little uniformity among countries or sometimes even among regions within a single country. Most governments assess a value-added tax or sales tax at the time of purchase that is based on a percentage of the purchase price. Most also assess a license or registration fee at the time of purchase; this tax often varies with the value of the vehicle and some measure of its fuel consumption. Finally, most assess an annual circulation or road use fee; this tax is often keyed to some measure of its fuel efficiency.
[1] Metschies, G. P. (2005) International Fuel Prices, 4th Edition. Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit, Eschborn, Germany, http://www.international-fuelprices.com/downloads/FuelPrices2005.pdf.
This is an excerpt from the book Global Climate Change: Convergence of Disciplines by Dr. Arnold J. Bloom and taken from UCVerse of the University of California.
©2010 Sinauer Associates and UC Regents
1 Comment
Mitch McCann wrote: 12-06-2011 07:00:22
Taxes on fuel might be part of an ecological policy aimed at reducing negative environmental impacts of excessive fuel use. One such impact, human activity related climate change, might be reduced by taxing fuels. Non tax policies, for example, the policy of requiring vehicle manufactures to increase the fuel efficiency of their offerings, may have undesirable effects without taxing fuels to mitigate the rebound effects. Rebound effects may include increased use of total fuel because of the proliferation and increasing employment of those technologies.