case for introducing an explicit carbon price into China's export tax

In recent years, export value-added tax (VAT) refund rebate and export tax (EVRRET) measures have been adopted for energy-intensive products in China. They are proclaimed to be climate policy, yet there is no explicit and unique carbon cost set on export, and the implicit export carbon tax rates var...

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Veröffentlicht in:Climate policy 2012-07, Vol.12 (4), p.410-423
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Xin, Li, Ji Feng, Zhang, Ya Xiong
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container_title Climate policy
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creator Wang, Xin
Li, Ji Feng
Zhang, Ya Xiong
description In recent years, export value-added tax (VAT) refund rebate and export tax (EVRRET) measures have been adopted for energy-intensive products in China. They are proclaimed to be climate policy, yet there is no explicit and unique carbon cost set on export, and the implicit export carbon tax rates vary dramatically across sectors and over different periods. A method is provided to introduce an explicit and unique carbon cost into the current EVRRET. By setting a comparable carbon cost (US$20/tCO ₂ and US$30/tCO ₂) for eight major energy-intensive sectors to which the EVRRET is widely applied, it derives the corresponding ad valorem average rate for each sector. The introduction of a carbon cost into export VAT refund rebate policy would not increase the current export VAT refund rebate rate (except for the chemical sector), but would simply define a ceiling. However, the same introduction into the export tax policy would lead to an overall increase in sectoral export tax rates. In terms of competitiveness and World Trade Organisation concerns, the better option for introducing a carbon cost into Chinese exports would be through reforming export VAT refund rebate policy.
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They are proclaimed to be climate policy, yet there is no explicit and unique carbon cost set on export, and the implicit export carbon tax rates vary dramatically across sectors and over different periods. A method is provided to introduce an explicit and unique carbon cost into the current EVRRET. By setting a comparable carbon cost (US$20/tCO ₂ and US$30/tCO ₂) for eight major energy-intensive sectors to which the EVRRET is widely applied, it derives the corresponding ad valorem average rate for each sector. The introduction of a carbon cost into export VAT refund rebate policy would not increase the current export VAT refund rebate rate (except for the chemical sector), but would simply define a ceiling. However, the same introduction into the export tax policy would lead to an overall increase in sectoral export tax rates. In terms of competitiveness and World Trade Organisation concerns, the better option for introducing a carbon cost into Chinese exports would be through reforming export VAT refund rebate policy.</abstract><cop>London</cop><pub>Earthscan</pub><doi>10.1080/14693062.2011.644071</doi><tpages>14</tpages></addata></record>
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source PAIS Index; Taylor & Francis Journals Complete
subjects border carbon measures
Carbon
carbon markets
carbon tax
Ceilings
Chemicals
China
China (People's Republic)
Chine
Climate
Climate change
Climate policy
commerce international
Competition
Competitiveness
contenu carbone
Cost
Economic models
embedded carbon
Energy
Energy policy
Environmental policy
Environmental tax
export tax
Export taxes
Exports
Exports and imports
Fossil fuels
International trade
issues and policy
mesures douanières sur le carbone
Organic chemistry
Policies
Pollution
Prices
Reforming
Studies
Tariffs
Tax policy
Tax rates
Taxation
taxe carbone
taxe d'exportation
value added
VAT
World Trade Organization
title case for introducing an explicit carbon price into China's export tax
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