Skip to main content

Fuel for Thought: The what, why and how of motoring taxation

The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has highlighted the dilemma facing many governments – motoring tax income set to fall even as traffic rises - in an analysis of the decline in the amount of revenue collect from fuel duty and VED (vehicle excise duty) in the UK. The collapse in income from motoring taxation will be caused by increasingly fuel efficient petrol and diesel cars, and the predicted large-scale take-up of electric vehicles.
May 15, 2012 Read time: 3 mins
The 5538 Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) has highlighted the dilemma facing many governments – motoring tax income set to fall even as traffic rises - in an analysis of the decline in the amount of revenue collect from fuel duty and VED (vehicle excise duty) in the UK.

The collapse in income from motoring taxation will be caused by increasingly fuel efficient petrol and diesel cars, and the predicted large-scale take-up of electric vehicles.

Projections show the amount of fuel duty revenue collected by the Exchequer currently stands at 1.7 per cent of GDP, but will tumble to 1.1 per cent of GDP by 2029. Unless policy is changed VED will also drop - from 0.4 per cent of GDP to 0.1 per cent - over the same period.

Against this backdrop, a new difficulty has arisen for government. Despite a projected growth in traffic – the UK 1837 Department for Transport’s January 2012 estimate is for 44 per cent more traffic by 2035 – the IFS, using the government’s own figures, notes that revenue from motoring taxation (fuel and VED combined) is set to drop by £13 billion (US$20.94) a year in today’s money by 2029 (to £25 billion, from £38 billion in 2010). This is simply due to the improvement in the fuel efficiency of vehicles, as existing technologies are refined and new ones are adopted in response to the government’s climate change targets for greenhouse gas reduction.

The forecast is drawn as part of a detailed analysis of motoring taxation in a report called Fuel for Thought - The what, why and how of motoring taxation, commissioned by the 4961 RAC Foundation from the independent Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) and which is available at this link.

“The irony is that while ministers encourage us to buy greener, leaner cars, they are being forced to look at ways of clawing back the money motorists think they will be saving,” said Professor Stephen Glaister, director of the RAC Foundation. “This isn’t scaremongering. The Treasury has already announced a review of VED bands to ensure drivers make a ‘fair contribution’ to the public finances even as cars become more fuel efficient.”

Pointing out that the government has hard choices to make, Glaister said that amongst the options available are foregoing the money it gets from drivers, pushing up duty on petrol and diesel, or starting to tax green forms of energy such as the electricity used in battery powered cars.

“None are appealing,” says Glaister. “The first blows a hole in the Treasury’s budget. The second blows a hole in drivers’ budgets. And the third risks stalling the decarbonisation of road transport.”

According to Paul Johnson, the director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies, the current system of motoring taxation suffers from two significant problems. “First, petrol taxation does not reflect the fact that the costs I impose on others vary dramatically according to when and where I drive. So many drivers, in rural areas for example, are effectively over-taxed. But some, in congested urban areas, pay a lot less in tax than they would if they were paying for the costs they impose on other road users. Second, as cars become more fuel efficient the revenue from petrol tax will fall – eventually to close to nothing if we are to meet our climate change targets. A national system of charging related to mileage and congestion, largely replacing the current system of fuel taxation, would help solve both those problems,” Johnson said.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • CBI calls for new approach to road funding
    October 11, 2012
    The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) calls for road charging should be introduced on the strategic road network in England. Proposals in the report, Bold Thinking: A model to fund our future roads also suggest that responsibility for the network’s budget should be taken away from the Department for Transport (DfT) and given to an independent regulator. Launching the report, CBI director-general John Cridland said a regulatory asset base (RAB) model was required to address the problem of long-term fu
  • Electric and petrol-powered cars could be price-competitive in 2017
    July 29, 2013
    New projections from US advocacy group the Electric Coalition indicate that the cost of owning an electric car is on its way to becoming competitive with petrol-powered cars. The coalition teamed with professional services firm PricewaterhouseCoopers (PWC) to calculate expected costs of several types of compact cars, pitting battery-electric against internal combustion engines, plug-in hybrids and hybrid vehicles. Including cost of purchase, fuel, maintenance, federal tax credits and residuals, the data sho
  • EVs: Time for a rethink
    December 14, 2021
    Given a growing body of evidence that EVs are not the clean, green machines they are made out to be, Andrew Bunn suggests they can only be part of the puzzle – not the answer to environmental problems
  • Government ban on petrol and diesel cars ‘doesn’t go far enough’, says UK adviser
    August 7, 2017
    Writing in the Guardian newspaper, Professor Frank Kelly, chair of the UK Government’s Committee on the Medical Effects of Air Pollutants, says fewer not cleaner vehicles are needed to tackle the UK’s air pollution crisis, plus more cycling and walking and better transit systems. The Government recently released its Air Quality Plan, in which it announced that it will ban all petrol and diesel vehicles (including hybrids) from 2040, with only electric vehicles available after that.