Abstract

In this paper, the welfare effects of a budget-neutral increase in taxes on car commuters are studied in a model that takes into account the presence of employer-paid parking at the workplace. It is found that the presence of employer-paid parking substantially increases the welfare effect of such a tax reform, independent of the use of the revenues: congestion taxes not only correct congestion externalities, they also reduce the inefficiency caused by employer-paid parking. Moreover, different congestion effects of alternative recycling instruments and the presence of employer-paid parking jointly imply that recycling the tax revenues via higher public transport subsidies may yield much more favourable welfare effects than previously believed. It can easily outperform recycling the tax revenues via lower labour taxes. Finally, cashing out parking costs to public transport users is found to generate substantial positive welfare effects. Numerical analysis confirms the theory.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call