J 2021

European Green Deal: Environmental Taxation and Its Sustainability in Conditions of High Levels of Corruption

KOTLÁN, Igor, Daniel NĚMEC, Eva KOTLÁNOVÁ, Petr SKALKA, Rudolf MACEK et. al.

Základní údaje

Originální název

European Green Deal: Environmental Taxation and Its Sustainability in Conditions of High Levels of Corruption

Autoři

KOTLÁN, Igor (203 Česká republika), Daniel NĚMEC (203 Česká republika), Eva KOTLÁNOVÁ (203 Česká republika, domácí), Petr SKALKA, Rudolf MACEK (703 Slovensko) a Zuzana MACHOVÁ

Vydání

Sustainability, 2021, 2071-1050

Další údaje

Jazyk

angličtina

Typ výsledku

Článek v odborném periodiku

Obor

50202 Applied Economics, Econometrics

Stát vydavatele

Švýcarsko

Utajení

není předmětem státního či obchodního tajemství

Kód RIV

RIV/47813059:19520/21:A0000255

Organizační jednotka

Obchodně podnikatelská fakulta v Karviné

UT WoS

000624791000001

Klíčová slova anglicky

European Green Deal;environmental taxation;corruption;shadow economy;sustainability;DSGE modelling;tax policy;economic policy

Štítky

Změněno: 21. 4. 2022 12:07, Miroslava Snopková

Anotace

V originále

Despite environmental taxation's presumed advantages for long-term sustainable development goals, the problematic institutional conditions associated with high levels of corruption could become a significant obstacle undermining these efforts. Taking the example of the Czech Republic as a benchmark, the aim of this article is to evaluate the impact of corruption and its implications on the size of the official and the shadow economy in the sector burdened with environmental excise tax while confronting it with the sector not burdened with such tax. In terms of methodology, an extended DSGE (Dynamic stochastic general equilibrium) model has been used. In the case of the shadow economy, the two sectors, burdened and not burdened with environmental taxes, followed a similar trend. However, concerning the official economy, this research found out that if environmental taxation is not applied, then lower, non-systemic corruption has a positive effect on the size of production as the effect of increased workforce motivation clearly dominates, suppressing the effect of reduced capital accumulation. Conversely, in the sector burdened with environmental taxation, corruption has an almost unequivocally negative effect on the production economy. In this sense, corruption has the capacity to limit the implementation of sustainable development policies including the European Green Deal, especially if it is systemic in nature.