Litcius/Paper detail

Cross-national analysis of attitudes towards fossil fuel subsidy removal

Niklas Harring, Erik Jönsson, Simon Matti, Gabriela Mundaca, Sverker C. Jagers

2023Nature Climate Change53 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract In 2021, governments of 51 countries spent US$697 billion on subsidizing fossil fuels. Removing fossil fuel subsidies is crucial not only for reducing CO 2 emissions and making carbon pricing more effective, but also for making more valuable use of government funds. Currently, however, scientific evidence on the scale and scope of public attitudes towards fossil fuel subsidy-removal policies is lacking, yet it is instrumental for gauging political feasibility. Furthermore, previous studies tend to focus on carbon pricing in the developed world only. Here we present a comparative analysis of attitudes towards both carbon taxation and fossil fuel subsidy removal, focusing on five developing countries across four continents. It is found that (1) removing fossil fuel subsidies is not more undesirable than introducing carbon taxation and (2) the public has more-positive attitudes towards subsidy removal if optimal use of the saved fiscal revenues is specified.

Topics & Concepts

SubsidyFossil fuelRevenueNatural resource economicsGovernment (linguistics)Scope (computer science)EconomicsPoliticsBusinessPublic economicsEconomic policyFinanceWaste managementMarket economyPolitical scienceEngineeringProgramming languagePhilosophyLawLinguisticsComputer scienceEnergy, Environment, and Transportation PoliciesClimate Change Policy and EconomicsEnergy, Environment, Economic Growth