Distributional impacts of taxing water pollution in the Olifants river basin of South Africa

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
Distributional impacts of taxing water pollution in the Olifants river basin of South Africa
Abstract
We study the distributional impacts of a water pollution tax in the Olifants river basin using a regional environmental computable general equilibrium (CGE) model. The distributional impacts were evaluated considering both the household income and spending-side effects. We find that the water pollution tax is progressive on the income side as the poorest and vulnerable derive lower shares of their income from capital, which bears the biggest burden of the tax. However, the tax is regressive on the expenditure side due to the higher share of pollution-intensive goods in poor households’ expenditure. The net effect of the tax is, however, not pro-poor. Revenue recycling through a subsidy to pollution abatement sectors mitigates the adverse distributional impacts of the tax whereas uniform direct lump-sum transfers to households’ income reverse the adverse distributional impacts.
Publication
Development Southern Africa
Volume
38
Issue
6
Pages
1001-1016
Date
2021-05-26
ISSN
0376-835X
Call Number
openalex: W3164313496
Extra
openalex: W3164313496 mag: 3164313496
Citation
Kyei, C. K., & Hassan, R. M. (2021). Distributional impacts of taxing water pollution in the Olifants river basin of South Africa. Development Southern Africa, 38(6), 1001–1016. https://doi.org/10.1080/0376835x.2021.1932425