Title:
When Will People Pay to Pollute? Environmental Taxes, Political Trust, and
Experimental Evidence from Britain
Author(s):
Fairbrother, Malcolm
Year of publication:
2016
Available Date:
2016-06-24T08:14:23.318Z
Abstract:
Previous studies have argued that political trust shapes public opinion with
respect to policies for environmental protection, but this paper provides the
first evidence that the relationship is causal. The paper presents results
from survey experiments investigating conditions under which Britons are
willing to pay taxes on polluting activities. Public willingness to pay
increases sharply if new environmental taxes are offset by cuts to other kinds
of taxes, but political distrust undermines much of the effect of this
revenue-neutrality. People are also no more willing if revenues are
hypothecated for spending on environmental protection, while making such taxes
more tangible to people—by naming petrol and electricity as specific products
to which they will apply—has a modestly negative effect.
Keywords:
Environmental taxes
political trust
survey experiments
multilevel models
DDC-Classification:
320 Politikwissenschaft
333 Boden- und Energiewirtschaft
Publication Type:
Konferenzveröffentlichung
Also published in:
2016 Berlin conference on global environmental change: transformative global
climate governance "aprés Paris", Berlin 23-24 May 2016
URL of the Original Publication:
Department/institution:
Politik- und Sozialwissenschaften
Otto-Suhr-Institut für Politikwissenschaft / Forschungszentrum für Umweltpolitik (FFU)
Series/Multivolume:
Berlin conference on global environmental change