Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context

Abstract Although carbon taxes are an effective way for countries to meet the emissions targets set out in the Paris Agreement, these policies remain unpopular. Here we present a survey experiment conducted in China, Germany, India, and the UK, based on over 13,000 evaluations of policy designs. We...

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Main Authors: Hamid Bulut, Robin Samuel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-07-01
Series:Communications Earth & Environment
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02562-0
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author Hamid Bulut
Robin Samuel
author_facet Hamid Bulut
Robin Samuel
author_sort Hamid Bulut
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Although carbon taxes are an effective way for countries to meet the emissions targets set out in the Paris Agreement, these policies remain unpopular. Here we present a survey experiment conducted in China, Germany, India, and the UK, based on over 13,000 evaluations of policy designs. We examined four factors influencing public support: effectiveness in reducing emissions, impact on household costs, use of tax revenues, and international coordination. Communicating environmental effectiveness increased support, while making costs explicit reduced it. Preferences for revenue use varied: some respondents favoured direct payments, while others preferred investments in welfare. Contrary to expectations, only German respondents showed increased support when other countries also adopted similar measures. These findings highlight the importance of national context in shaping public attitudes. Carefully designed and clearly communicated carbon tax policies can improve public acceptability and enhance the political feasibility of effective climate action.
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spelling doaj-art-2bcc04230866415e90e58dc8615bfc7c2025-08-20T04:02:41ZengNature PortfolioCommunications Earth & Environment2662-44352025-07-016111210.1038/s43247-025-02562-0Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national contextHamid Bulut0Robin Samuel1Department of Social Sciences, University of LuxembourgDepartment of Social Sciences, University of LuxembourgAbstract Although carbon taxes are an effective way for countries to meet the emissions targets set out in the Paris Agreement, these policies remain unpopular. Here we present a survey experiment conducted in China, Germany, India, and the UK, based on over 13,000 evaluations of policy designs. We examined four factors influencing public support: effectiveness in reducing emissions, impact on household costs, use of tax revenues, and international coordination. Communicating environmental effectiveness increased support, while making costs explicit reduced it. Preferences for revenue use varied: some respondents favoured direct payments, while others preferred investments in welfare. Contrary to expectations, only German respondents showed increased support when other countries also adopted similar measures. These findings highlight the importance of national context in shaping public attitudes. Carefully designed and clearly communicated carbon tax policies can improve public acceptability and enhance the political feasibility of effective climate action.https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02562-0
spellingShingle Hamid Bulut
Robin Samuel
Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
Communications Earth & Environment
title Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
title_full Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
title_fullStr Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
title_full_unstemmed Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
title_short Public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
title_sort public support for carbon taxes varies across countries and policy design must consider the national context
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-025-02562-0
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