电动汽车司机应该交里程税吗?

Lucas W. Davis, J. Sallee
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引用次数: 22

摘要

在许多国家,汽油税的收入用于资助高速公路和其他交通基础设施。随着道路上电动汽车数量的增加,这引发了对这种融资机制的有效性和公平性的质疑。在本文中,我们的问题是电动汽车司机是否应该缴纳里程税。虽然汽油税传统上被视为利益税,但我们从经济效率的角度出发。我们得出了一个最优电动汽车里程税的条件,突出了一个关键的权衡。一方面,驾驶的外部性,包括交通拥堵和事故,意味着里程税是有效的。另一方面,汽油往往价格过低,因此较低的(甚至是负的)里程税可能在鼓励替代汽油动力汽车方面具有效率效益。然后,我们转向实证分析,旨在更好地理解当前美国电动汽车的政策格局。使用最新的、具有全国代表性的微观数据,我们计算出电动汽车每年减少的汽油税收入为2.5亿美元。我们表明,放弃的税收收入高度集中在少数几个州,而且是高度递减的,因为大多数电动汽车是由高收入家庭驾驶的,我们讨论了这是如何激励和告知最优政策的。
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Should Electric Vehicle Drivers Pay a Mileage Tax?
In many countries, the revenue from gasoline taxes is used to fund highways and other transportation infrastructure. As the number of electric vehicles on the road increases, this raises questions about the effectiveness and equity of this financing mechanism. In this paper, we ask whether electric vehicle drivers should pay a mileage tax. Though the gasoline tax has been traditionally viewed as a benefits tax, we instead take the perspective of economic efficiency. We derive a condition for the optimal electric vehicle mileage tax that highlights a key trade-off. On the one hand, there are externalities from driving, including traffic congestion and accidents, that imply a mileage tax is efficient. On the other hand, gasoline tends to be underpriced, so a low (or even negative) mileage tax might have efficiency benefits in encouraging substitution away from gasoline-powered vehicles. We then turn to an empirical analysis aimed at better understanding the current policy landscape for electric vehicles in the United States. Using newly available, nationally representative microdata, we calculate that electric vehicles have reduced gasoline tax revenues by $250 million annually. We show that the forgone tax revenue is highly concentrated in a handful of states and is highly regressive, as most electric vehicles are driven by high-income households, and we discuss how this motivates and informs optimal policy.
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