Paying the Polluter
Preview

Hardback

Paying the Polluter

Environmentally Harmful Subsidies and their Reform

9781782545309 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Frans H. Oosterhuis, Institute for Environmental Studies, VU University, Amsterdam, the Netherlands and Patrick ten Brink, European Environmental Bureau, Belgium
Publication Date: 2014 ISBN: 978 1 78254 530 9 Extent: 368 pp
Pledges to reform environmentally harmful subsidies (EHS) have increased over the past few years, at both global and national levels. Paying the Polluter addresses the most important issues to be considered when embarking upon these necessary reforms.

Copyright & permissions

Recommend to librarian

Your Details

Privacy Policy

Librarian Details

Download leaflet

Print page

More Information
Critical Acclaim
Contributors
Contents
More Information
Pledges to reform environmentally harmful subsidies (EHS) have increased over the past few years, at both global and national levels. Paying the Polluter addresses the most important issues to be considered when embarking upon these necessary reforms.

In this unique work, leading experts explore the definition of EHS, how they can be identified and measured and assess their impacts and the potential benefits of reform. Barriers and opportunities for EHS reform are elaborated with examples of successes and failures. A practical subsidy reform tool is also presented, giving guidance to help develop transparent inventories of subsidies and road maps for future development.

Demonstrating how subsidy reform may contribute to a better environment, support fiscal reform and address social and economic objectives, this authoritative book will appeal to policy makers and their advisors all over the world. It will also be a useful sourcebook for academics interested in concrete applications of environmental economics. Finally it should prove a rich and informative read for anyone looking for facts and arguments supporting green budget reforms.
Critical Acclaim
‘The financial means embedded in subsidies for unsustainable systems of production and consumption are increasingly well studied and reported. This has led to policy recommendations (e.g. OECD, EU) on how to reform subsidy systems in support of the necessary transitions to a low carbon and ecosystem resilient society based on a strong resource efficient economy. The authors in this book contribute to the debate based on recent, high quality and policy relevant research. It is a timely contribution to a pressing financial issue in environmental policy.’
– Hans Bruyninckx, Executive Director of the European Environment Agency

‘Recently the IPCC finished their 5th Assessment report and we see that while emissions continue unabated – and in some areas even increase, relatively little is done in terms of policy making. Instead of sound policies to deal with climate issues, we are still faced with perverse incentives that promote fossil fuels. This book sets itself a very important agenda of trying to find a workable path towards abolishing such subsidies. This is vital reading for all policy makers.’
– Thomas Sterner, Visiting Chief Economist, Environmental Defense Fund
Professor of environmental economics, University of Gothenburg

‘EU countries increasingly receive recommendations through the European Semester and OECD Environmental Performance Reviews to assess and progressively phase out environmentally harmful subsidies. It is not only a matter of avoiding damage to the environment, it is also a question of transparency, equity, and of eliminating unjustified privileges. Subsidy reform can help reduce public deficits, restore fair market conditions and eliminate distortions in competition. This book is a precious tool for Governments and experts.’
– Aldo Ravazzi Douvan, Italian Ministry of Environment, Professor of Sustainable Development at University Roma Luiss

‘Tax spending and public subsidies harmful to the environment have attracted high level attention at the Rio and Johannesburg Sustainable Development Conferences, in the context of the Kyoto Protocol and of the Convention on Biological Diversity, in OECD and EU recommendations, and are now firmly on the public agenda. They are often also poorly designed, do not reach their goals, are costly, not transparent and can be inefficient. With the present public budget crises in many countries, rarely has the timing been more favorable to lower such harmful support. The book is thus timely and shows through concrete examples that the reform of harmful public subsidies is possible.’
– Guillaume Sainteny, Associate Professor, Ecole Polytechnique, Paris, France

‘In the policy world, there are few opportunities for reforms that can simultaneously benefit the economy, society and the environment. Phasing-out environmentally harmful subsidies is one. It can reduce the burden on government budgets, free up funds for more worthy causes, and reduce perverse incentives to pollute the environment and over-use scarce natural resources. However, subsidy reforms have been notoriously difficult to implement, despite the efforts of organisations like the OECD, IEA, GSI, World Bank and IMF. Reform is hampered by the limited information available on subsidies, their impacts, and who actually benefits from them. This book brings to light the latest information and analysis on environmentally harmful subsidies and reform efforts, pulled together by some of the leading experts on this issue. It is essential reading for any policy maker wanting to ensure a smooth and successful reform of environmentally harmful subsidies.’
– Helen Mountford, Deputy Director, OECD Environment Directorate
Contributors
Contributors: K. Bachus, A. Bruvoll, J. Cottrell, L. Franckx, B. Kretschmer, M. Lehmann, I. Mayeres, L. Mazza, S. Newman, F. Oosterhuis, J. Pieters, D. Russi, J. Sauvage, R. Steenblik, P. ten Brink, K. Umpfenbach, C. van Beers, J.C.J.M. van den Bergh, H. Vennemo, A. von Moltke, S. Withana
Contents
Contents:

Foreword
Kai Schlegelmilch

1. Introduction: High Hopes and Down-to-Earth Realism
Frans Oosterhuis and Patrick ten Brink

2. A Global Survey of Potentially Environmentally Harmful Subsidies
Ronald Steenblik

3. Hidden Subsidies: The Invisible Part of the EHS Iceberg
Sirini Withana, Patrick ten Brink, Leonardo Mazza and Daniela Russi

4. Can We Recognise an Environmentally Harmful Subsidy if We See One?
Jan Pieters

5. Quantifying the Impacts of Environmentally Harmful Subsidies
Cees van Beers and Jeroen C.J.M. van den Bergh

6. Energy Subsidies
Frans Oosterhuis and Katharina Umpfenbach

7. Environmentally Harmful Subsidies in the Transport Sector
Laurent Franckx and Inge Mayeres

8. Agriculture, Food and Water
Frans Oosterhuis and Kris Bachus

9. Environmentally Harmful Subsidies and Biodiversity
Patrick ten Brink, Markus Lehmann, Bettina Kretschmer, Stephanie Newman and Leonardo Mazza

10. Reforming EHS in Europe: Success Stories, Failures and Agenda Setting
Jacqueline Cottrell

11. Phasing Out Environmentally Harmful Subsidies Worldwide
Anja von Moltke

12. Reform of Environmentally Harmful Subsidies: Distributional Issues
Annegrete Bruvoll and Haakon Vennemo

13. The Way Forward: Reforming EHS in the Transition to a Green Economy
Patrick ten Brink, Sirini Withana and Frans Oosterhuis

Appendix 1: Classifying and Estimating Government Support
Ronald Steenblik and Jehan Sauvage

Appendix 2: A Subsidy Reform Tool
Patrick ten Brink and Sirini Withana

Index
eBook for individuals
978 1 78254 531 6
From £25.00
Click here for options
eBook for library purchase
978 1 78254 531 6
View sample chapter and check access on:
eBook options

Available for individuals to buy from these websites

Or recommend to your institution to acquire on Elgaronline
  • Buy as part of an eBook subject collection - flexible options available
  • Downloading and printing allowed
  • No limits on concurrent user access, ideal for course use
My Cart