A green tax shift is a fiscal policy which lowers the taxes on income including wages and profit, and raises taxes on consumption, particularly on the consumption of non-renewable or unsustainable consumption.
Examples of taxes to be lowered are:
- payroll and income taxes.
- Carbon taxes on the use of fossil fuels;
- Royalties on the extraction of mineral, energy, and forestry products;
- Licence fees for fishing and hunting;
- Specific taxes on technologies and products which are associated with substantial negative externalities;
- Garbage disposal taxes;
- Taxes on effluents, emissions and other hazardous wastes.
Taxes on consumption may take the feebate approach advocated by Amory Lovins in which additional fees on less sustainable products -- such as sport utility vehicles -- are pooled to fund rebates on more sustainable alternatives -- such as hybrid electric vehicles.
The object of a green tax shift is often to implement a "full cost accounting", using fiscal policy to internalize market distorting externalities, which leads to higher efficiency, and sustainable wealth creation.