
This paper introduces a new argument to the debate about the role of environmental taxes in modern tax systems. Some environmental taxes, particularly taxes on gasoline or electricity, are more difficult to evade than taxes on labor or income. When the tax base is shifted in a revenue-neutral manner toward these environmental taxes, the result is a net reduction in the amount of tax evasion. Using a carbon tax as a motivating example, the "tax evasion effect" is shown to sharply reduce the welfare cost of controlling emissions. A simple computable general equilibrium model suggests that the impact of considering tax evasion can be large: costs are lowered by 28 percent in the United States, by 89 percent in China, and by 97 percent in India. In countries with high levels of preexisting tax evasion, a carbon tax will pay for itself through improvements in the efficiency of the tax system.
environmental regulation, Pigouvian tax, tax evasion, green tax swap, tax interactions, jel: jel:H26, jel: jel:Q54, jel: jel:Q53, jel: jel:H21
environmental regulation, Pigouvian tax, tax evasion, green tax swap, tax interactions, jel: jel:H26, jel: jel:Q54, jel: jel:Q53, jel: jel:H21
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| influence This indicator reflects the overall/total impact of an article in the research community at large, based on the underlying citation network (diachronically). | Top 10% | |
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