Recently posted on SSRN: Hsu, Shi-Ling, "Carbon Tax Heuristics and Politics: The Case of the Gasoline Tax"
(April 15, 2008).
Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1121039
Abstract: Economists are beginning to form a consensus that the most effective
and cost-effective way to reduce global greenhouse gas emissions is
through a carbon tax. The insight of economists and other policy
analysts is that in the greenhouse gas context, the design of
cap-and-trade programs creates so many opportunities for rent-seeking
that they may not be very cost-effective, and may not reduce greenhouse
gas emissions at all. The appeal of carbon tax proposals is that they
are so simple and sensible that rent-seeking would have to be very
audacious to succeed.
Carbon
tax proposals, however, have divided economists from almost everybody
else. In particular, an exceptionally effective and efficient carbon
tax, the gasoline tax, has been even more unanimously supported by
economists and even more virulently opposed by almost everyone else.
This Article explores some of the psychological barriers to public
acceptance of gasoline tax increases, and also examines a political
economy theory that has been propounded to explain a uniquely North
American hostility towards gasoline taxes. An empirical analysis is
undertaken, using a survey instrument to examine public attitudes
towards gasoline taxes as a means of reducing emissions from motor
vehicles. The concept of "revenue recycling" gasoline tax proceeds is
tested for public acceptance, as well as other hypotheses pertaining to
cognitive barriers to understanding gasoline taxes. As well, economic
and demographic factors are examined to study the implications of the
one political economic theory of why gasoline taxes are so virulently
opposed in North America.
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