Attitudes to Personal Carbon Allowances: The effect of trust in politicians, perceived fairness and ideology
Abstract
The idea of Personal Carbon Allowances (PCAs) was presented by the British Environment Secretary David
Miliband in 2006. Although no state is seriously developing proposals for them, they have been heavily debated
within academia, NGOs and policy making circles. PCAs can be seen as a logical extension of market efficiency
underpinning emissions trading schemes, so far only applied at the firm level, to individuals. The purpose of this
paper is to analyse some critical aspects of the public’s support for a PCA scheme. We focus on the relations
between attitude towards a PCA scheme and trust in politicians, perceived fairness and ideology, respectively. We
also analyse the relation between the respective attitudes towards an increase in the current tax rate and towards an
implementation of a PCA scheme. We base our study on a mail questionnaire sent out to a random, representative
sample in Sweden.
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Date
2009-05-04Author
Jagers, Sverker C.
Löfgren, Åsa
Stripple, Johannes
Keywords
personal carbon allowances
attitudes
trust
fairness
ideology
Publication type
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Series/Report no.
Working Papers in Economics
360
Language
eng