Environmental Taxation: New Evidence for Energy Taxes

International Public Administration Review, Vol. 13, No. 3–4/2015

15 Pages Posted: 22 Jan 2016

See all articles by Maja Grdinić

Maja Grdinić

University of Rijeka - Faculty of Economics

Maja Klun

University of Ljubljana - Faculty of Administration

Ziga Kotnik

University of Ljubljana - Faculty of Administration

Date Written: June 21, 2015

Abstract

The intensity of exploitation of natural resources has increased over the past decades, making environmental protection policy one of the most important priorities of government institutions. Various economic instruments, including taxation, may help policy makers in the EU meet environmental targets, among them a more secure and competitive green economy in Europe. The focus of this paper is on empirically investigating the direct effect of environmental taxes and the indirect effect of environmental expenditures sourced from environmental taxes on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the energy sector. The research applied the panel data analysis method to selected EU member states for the 1995–2010 period. The results show that the direct effect of environmental taxes on GHG emissions in the sector energy is statistically significant and negative. The indirect effects of environmental taxes resulting from environmental expenditures in the industrial and governmental sectors were found to be even stronger than the direct effect of taxes alone.

Keywords: Government Policy, Air Pollution, Climate, Environmental taxation

JEL Classification: Q28; Q53; Q54; H23

Suggested Citation

Grdinić, Maja and Klun, Maja and Kotnik, Ziga, Environmental Taxation: New Evidence for Energy Taxes (June 21, 2015). International Public Administration Review, Vol. 13, No. 3–4/2015, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2719597

Maja Grdinić (Contact Author)

University of Rijeka - Faculty of Economics ( email )

Ivana Filipovića 4
Rijeka, 51000
Croatia

Maja Klun

University of Ljubljana - Faculty of Administration ( email )

Gosarjeva ulica 5
Ljubljana, SI-1000

Ziga Kotnik

University of Ljubljana - Faculty of Administration ( email )

Gosarjeva ulica 5
Ljubljana, SI-1000
Slovenia

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