Carbon tax

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ThierrySan
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by ThierrySan » 25/03/07, 11:16

Certainly not!!
The TIPP is another tax that was frozen recently by our friend Sarko, hot on the heels before the oil spike ... during 2002 if I remember correctly! Consequently, it no longer fulfills its primary role, which was precisely to compensate for fluctuations in the price of a barrel of oil. And this, so that the price does not constantly play on the wallet of the consumer.
The smart guy has seen the blow, because oil has experienced very large outbreaks in the past 5 years. Consequently, this made it possible to bail out the debts of the State ... even if it is not yet enough!

No no! In my opinion, the carbon tax will be a tax added, quite simply, to the taxes already present on oil. Can you tell us how much each tax on different petroleum products is ?! A link?!
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Philippe Schutt
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by Philippe Schutt » 09/04/07, 12:07

Small rectiff.
The TIPP is no longer an amount as a% of the price, it is a fixed amount per liter. therefore the rise in oil prices had no effect on state taxes.
what will this tax be used for? impossible to say because in the French constitution it is stipulated that the receipts are independent of the expenses. Clearly, the cash will be put in the common pot. Any specific assignment would be constitutionally unintended.
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zac
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by zac » 09/04/07, 18:13

Hello

Small precision TIPP has not existed for more than a year : Cheesy:

@+
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ThierrySan
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by ThierrySan » 09/04/07, 18:30

You're right Philippe!

Complete information on fuels, on the following links:
http://www.industrie.gouv.fr/energie/pe ... e_petr.htm
http://www.ufip.fr/?rubrique=1&ss_rubri ... 12&id=d_46
http://www.entretien-auto.com/prix_essence.php

With that, we should be good! : Cheesy:
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by delnoram » 09/04/07, 19:09

I can play ? :D

Since January 1, 2005 it is called TIC, but do not worry, there is only the name that changes to cover all fuels and not just those of petroleum origin.

I do not know if it was in%, fixed tax before October 1, 2000, floating on this date, then frozen by who you know.

VAT on the other hand benefits from the rise in the price of oil.
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by bolton069 » 09/04/07, 20:55

nanou13 wrote:Yes I went to N. Hulot's website and I read his proposal on the carbon tax in his ecological pact
I also went to the site of JM Jancovici which is the basis of this idea of ​​tax.

In fact I am doing a memoir, and I must have a critical analysis on this tax, show the advantages but also the disadvantages. This is not obvious!

Anyway thank you for your reply.


Hello, to understand correctly, I advise you to read the EXCELLENTISSIME book by JM Jancovici: "Full Please".

However as I just read and it is fresh in the head, I will explain the principle: the authors advocate a very strong, but gradual increase in the price of oil (in order to avoid big economic problems oil shock style 1973 . : Shock:) a tax that increases each year.

So a voluntary, continuous and infinite increase in the price of oil, in order to finance the alternatives, this could possibly also serve to dissociate the price paid from the volatile price of crude.

And be ready when problems arise due to the impossibility of supply from producers to keep up with demand for oil.

Because what hurts is not so much the increase in the price of oil as its violence.

The authors explain very well the different advantages, but also disadvantages. :D It's pretty honest from their page.

Good evening, available for further explanations.

As usual, I invite you to correct any inaccuracies, incompleteness, distractions, ... that I could have proffered above.
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Re: Carbon tax




by Christophe » 11/03/16, 15:12

With hindsight I think that the carbon tax was only one more speculative tool for banks and industrialists and had no effect on the field of CO2 emissions: environmental-news / europe-wants-to-reduce-its-CO2-emissions-t2871.html

martine-et-la-mini-tax-carbon-cce-humor-pic567.jpg
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