Shifting Gears? The Impact of Austria’s Transport Policy Mix on CO2 Emissions from Passenger Cars

Published in Working Paper, 2024

Passenger transport plays a crucial role in achieving carbon-neutrality. While a switch to zero-emission vehicles is a crucial part in this process, policy makers likely have to resort to a differentiated mix of complementary policy measures to achieve global targets on carbon-neutrality. To help policy makers design effective measures, we analyse the effect of environmental policies on CO2 emissions from passenger cars in Austria from 1965-2019. In a first step, we propose a novel environmental policy stringency index tailored to the Austrian transport sector for the period 1950-2019. In a second step, we analyse the effect of different policies on transport-related CO2 emissions in a structural vector autoregressive model. This allows us to control for possible interdependencies between the policies and remaining variables. We find that policies targeting the investment decision to buy new cars reduced emissions in Austria more significantly than policies targeting the usage of cars. The engine-related insurance tax quantitatively shows the strongest impact on emissions, while the standard fuel consumption tax shows the strongest statistical significance.

Recommended citation: Eibinger, T., Manner, H., and Steininger, K. (2024). "Shifting Gears? The Impact of Austria's Transport Policy Mix on CO2 Emissions from Passenger Cars" Working Paper. https://eibinget.github.io/files/sg_0424.pdf