Dutch Government To Tax Drivers Based On Car Use
An anonymous reader writes "The Netherlands is testing a new car use tax system that will tax drivers based upon how much they drive rather than just taxing the vehicle itself. The trials utilize a little box outfitted with GPS, wireless internet, and a complex rating system that tracks a car's environmental impact, its distance driven, its route, and what time it is driven as a fairer way to assess the impact of the vehicle and hopefully dissuade people from driving. The proposal will be introduced slowly as a replacement for the current car and gas tax, however it is most certainly controversial and will be a real test of how far environmentally savvy Dutch citizens will be willing to go to reduce the impact of the car."
It makes the tax more fair to charge road-users by the mile and the ton over the road, and how would you measure that without a GPS odometer in every car?. Don't look at the idea that the state associates your tax ID with your vehicle and tracks your every move. That's just the fairest way to collect the tax. There's no other motive here. Take off your tinfoil hat. There is no ulterior motive. Trust us.
Help stamp out iliturcy.
Why not just tax fuel like everyone else? This messing about with GPS seems ridiculous to achieve such a simple aim.
It's called gasoline tax.
Isn't this much easier to achieve -- albeit with less accuracy -- via fuel tax? Every time the government here proposes a mileage tax, I can't help but think we already have one. Added benefit of encouraging people to drive more efficient cars.
Putting an environmental impact fee (tax) on fuel would be a more reliable compensation for your impact than GPS. If I sit idling in my car for a few hours I can burn an entire tank of gas without moving an inch.
For what will the GPS tracking *really* be used?
No really. It's for your own good.
Deleted
Surely a tax on petrol would be preferable?
This tax means a 6 litre SUV will pay the same as a little 1.5 litre 2-seater!
If you live in the Netherlands and don't live within biking distance of work, you're an idiot.
This isn't about fairly taxing road usage. That's just their rationale for implementing a system for tracking private citizens.
I must applaud them though. Instead of using the threat of terrorism to justify the system, they are hijacking ecological concerns. That shows imagination.
are the costs involved with building and maintaining this system. Combined with privacy concerns, possible fraud and system failure makes an fuel tax much more preferable.
Wish we could do that in other places such as fat-ass-central: the USA. But that would smack of some environmental/social welfare idea and the fat-ass Conservatives would have none of it.
FTA: Eric-Mark Huitema, a transportation specialist with I.B.M ... “To do it you need support of the government, and it needs to happen when there is not an election because there’s always a bit of resistance.”
With people like that, we don't need terrorists hating democracy, we obviously have democracy-haters running the place. Not that it's surprising, but it's even more odious when they're so blatant about it.
How about reading the odometer when you do the Vehicle Roadworthiness Test every 2 years or every year? Not completely tamperproof of course, but then I hear turning back the odometer on newer models is a bit trickier. As for cheating, it might be offset by not having to install a GPS device in every car.
KISS just went out the window.
makes ya wonder if this will lead to an increase in sales of GPS jammers...or at the very least...tinfoil
This plan was canceled in the Netherlands as one of the first acts of the latest government (Rutte-1). I believe they were planning to increase taxes on fuel as a compensation.
I'm a bit surprised to see this article at slashdot. The plans to have tax on milage (kilometer heffing in dutch) are already existing for a very long time here in the Netherlands. The former government was actually planning to introduce this, but the current government killed the project. So for me this isn't really news.
Further I'm very interested to see how such a system can be made robust. GPS signals are very weak and are easily jammed. One weather balloon and GPS jammer under the balloon will stop tax collection for half the nation.
We really need more engineers in politics!
How innovative. That would be the same as tax on petrol?
The 'kilometerheffing' or 'rekeningrijden', kilometer charge, is a system to replace road tax and the extra VAT (BPM=40%!) on a car. It is supposed to enter service in 2014 but because of non-governance a while back I suppose it is delayed.
How the pricing is determined:
-type of fuel
-type of engine/exhaust system (no particle filter == 2.5 ct/km)
-place of the road (not sure if this in the current proposals)
-time of day
The system makes having a car cheap and driving one expensive in congestion areas/time.
I think the system, which was publicized in 2010 (!), is a little unfair. I bought my car in 2009, which is without particle filter. I now face, without doing anything, a hefty 2.5ct/km tax. That is 875 euro per year for me. Tell me where I could have made a different decision.
nosig today
I'm Dutch, and there has been a lot of controversy about this system. One disadvantage of the system is that it's an invasion of privacy. The government now knows exactly where and when you drive.
I just don't understand why it's needed. Currently there's a lot of tax on gasoline, and it has the same function. If you drive a lot, or if your car uses lots of gasoline, you pay more.
This system provides the same function, but with a lot of bureaucracy, and an invasion of privacy.
Well, don't worry about that. We can get you back before you leave. (Dr. Who)
I thought the Dutch recently agreed on a fuel tax to achieve just this? From there on, all a GPS based solution has to offer is no more than a blatant invasion of privacy.
...I like the idea of not having to pay a load of taxes for something I don't use nearly as much as others.
But I'm very worried about the GPS tracking aspect of it. Do I think that this is part of some evil government plan to invade all our private lives and track our every move? No.. but I am not confident at all that at some point politicians won't start realizing there's a lot of data here that can be used for.. well, other things.
To give an example of this happening recently; A few years ago here in the Netherlands they started collecting fingerprints in order to get a passport - supposedly only for improving the security of the passport (preventing ID theft and such). It was only later that we learned that all these fingerprints were being collected and thrown together in a giant searchable database. Fortunately there was some outrage about that and now at least for the time being no more fingerprints are being collected.
But it does show that you need to be careful with these things; the current policymakers may be against the idea of using this data for other things, but there is no guarantee that future ones aren't
I promise to vigorously fight any legislation that uses gps or any in car monitoring technology. Already we pay evey year for registration and each town has an excise tax based on % of your vehicles estimated value (several hundred dollars per year), then 1/3 years for license renewals. I will disable/destroy it if my state becomes a tax/police dictatorship and forces it on us (hmmm are we there yet?)
Besides the obvious abuse and privacy issues public transportation options SUCK!! I'd love to ride a bus or train to work just so I could read or do work or whatever instead of drive but there just is no way to vet to work and back when I need to, and I'd have to walk miles to bus stops.
What's also extremely grating is that we already paid for the roads through taxes and now every state/local government is broke and can't maintain the roads anyway. And I'm confused about the mixed messages of buy fuel efficient cars to saves energy, reduce foreign oil dependance and save co2 emissions but now people do that and gas tax revenue falls so there's a new tax to make up for that? What?
Policy makers I wish I could quit you.
A few questions arise:
Who is going to pay for this device, which costs about the equivalence of a modern smartphone?
Will it be foolproof? GPS signal, cellphone network, internal circuits all easily hacked.
Should it even exist? Traffic jams are in itself negative enforcement for not driving, most people drive because they need to be somewhere (work, school, shop), that behavior is not going to change by taxes.
This plan has been discarded about 2 years ago!
I have read the article itself and it is very informative on the subject. The Slashdot caption is completely off the mark. It should have read: "Disappointment on abolishing plan to tax car use in the Netherlands" or something like that.
The headline and the summary are pretty much completely wrong: as the NY Times article explains, the trial was two years ago, but the government cancelled plans to introduce "rekeningrijden" (GPS-based metered driving) last year. So it's not going to happen anytime soon - unless the Netherlands suddenly gets a left-wing government, which is unlikely.
Trying to get people to stop using cars is basically forcing them to reduce their quality of life... There are simply no viable alternatives to many car uses for a lot of people.
Public transport is useless, its dirty, unreliable, often unsafe, overcrowded (yes i know the roads can be crowded too, but at least you have somewhere comfortable to sit in a car and can stop to take a break), doesn't run all night and is even more useless outside of large cities.
Riding bikes is only practical for short distances, where its not too hilly and where it's safe to do so... This is why so many people ride bikes in holland, the population is densely packed, the ground is flat and there are cycle routes everywhere. In other places, cyclists are expected to share the roads with large dangerous vehicles and aren't allowed to ride on the sidewalk - even if the sidewalk is empty and the road is full of vehicles, thus slowing down the vehicles (causing them to waste more fuel) and increasing the danger for the cyclist.
Taking away people's personal transportation is a terrible thing to do, having your own car massively increases your quality of life and this is not a new thing, having your own horse has done this for hundreds of years and now people are trying to force us to take a massive step backwards.
Lack of personal transportation will force people to live in overcrowded ghettos, since public transport is not profitable/practical without a high population...
http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
This plan is actually very old, from 2001. They tried again in 2005, then again somewhere in 2009/2010. The plan is discarded by the current government. One of the few good things they have done in my opinion. The road trail the article cites is from february 2010. Over one and half year old.
The plan would be a horribly complex technical solution, just to solve the problem of being able to buy gas in another country and charging more for busy roads during peak hours. Also, the plan was a major privacy concern because you would have to be tracked continually.
I know that Belgium said they had preferred to team up with the Netherlands for this but wanted to go ahead anyway. If this gets resurrected in the Netherlands anyway then that shows just how much democracy is left there.
Personally I don't mind the idea but I do mind both that it is overly complex --it's too much "because we can" technology and not much something arising from a problem to solve, that one guy with good intentions in TFA notwithstanding-- and moreover the privacy cost and systemic risks are flat-out unacceptable. Not least because the designers spent nary a thought on it.
Right after it got shot down the designers whined about seven years of development down the drain. Well, if you've spent seven years on it and you completely missed the first thing that just about everyone of your purported users complains about at first glance, then I have no sympathy for you.
Then again, the Netherlands is currently rolling out a national public transport RFID-based charge card that's possibly even more horrible in every way including wanton overcharging and privacy assault. I mean, that card (mifare classic) is broken and programs circulate to abuse it, and they know it. Yet instead of upgrading the card to something better (oyster been there and done it years ago) they claim "that's too hard" and instead go on building big databases to datamine for fraud. It's like they look forward to litigate.
They've been at that project for nineteen (19) years, has cost the taxpayer some three and a half billion (3500000000, give or take) euros, is causing increased public transport fares, still doesn't work right ("teething problems" after 19 years), and is run by a bunch of right crooks. That is of course just about the best incentive you can have to get out of your expensive car with its expensive taxes and (recall this is yurp) its expensive fuel. Syeah that'll work. You have that car anyway. You're going to use it, whatever the cost.
I for one re-re-re-welcome our privacy invading taxation lords with their overly complex tax-boxes.
There is NO WAY IN HELL he would have a tracker in his car because if anyone was able to break into the system it would make it easier for similar people to track, find, and do god knows what else, to his family. They could _know_ that his car was away from home and his wife's car was at home. They could _know_ that all vehicles were away and therefore the house was empty. And let's not even start to tell me the system is secure because we all know there is no such system!
There are just so many ways the information could be miss-used and abused, when a far simpler way to 'tax by the mile' is to put tax on the fuel.
Tax on fuel: You drive a lot ... you pay more. You drive an inefficient vehicle, or drive inefficiently, you pay more. Simple and cheap to setup, and cheap to run.
Eclectic beats from Leeds, UK
handmadehands.co.uk
...a multi storey bike park. The Dutch already do reduce car use. I went on holiday to Amsterdam and it is the only place I've ever seen with a multi-storey bicycle park full from top to bottom with bicycles. There are bicycles absolutely everywhere. Traffic in the city center is very light. Here's a picture http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3562/3321534598_c1ac9ce508_b.jpg
I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams
In addition to taxing based on time of day, for the love of God, put in a $0.10 per mile tax on those in the fast lane. Get the people who enter the motorways into the fast lane, cruise 20 under the limit there, then exit across traffic from the fast lane out of the fast lane. It should be empty for all times other than rush hour. A quick pass then gone. If they are going to do this, then go all the way and use taxes to help enforce the laws about lane etiquette.
Learn to love Alaska
Funny since a couple of years back, they had a political dispute with Belgium (neighbouring country) because almost every dutchie passes through belgium on their holidays by car (which during juli and august makes about 35%!!! of all highway traffic) and Belgium wanted to start using a tax-vignet ( like swiss) which you had to buy if you wanted too use their Highways.. The Netherlands pushed this out by threatning with "economical boycots" and continue too use the Belgian roads free of charge...
Yes, this is what this envirowacko crap is ultimately all about, making anything but going to work, generating $$$ for the US treasury, and then going home and being chained to it from lack of transportation virtually impossible. Don't even start with that "bicycle" nonsense, as I am 20 miles out in the f'n country, and riding a bike on these roads also requires a death wish to do. Work is 17 miles east, town is 20 miles west. This sort of scheme would be imprisonment on this 1 acre, as they keep raising the rates until only the rich can afford to travel.
How hard is it to build a transmitter that sends signals stronger than the satellites' ones and fools the receiver into thinking it is in a user-specified location?
I'm in America, but I really don't like this idea. I like the idea of freedom to travel. This discourages people from traveling. The rich should have no issue with this, but for anyone not so lucky, well, this is going to hurt.
Tax the value of the vehicle, not how much it travels.
Suppose you could use the information from such a system to find a missing child. You would have to do it. Imagine an episode of "Law and Order: Special Minor Child Victims Unit" where the cops are complaining about privacy advocates are blocking GPS info that would rescue a child (especially a blonde blue-eyed girl). Yes, you could get a court order, but there's no TIME for that!
Sorry, but gray text on gray background is making my eyes bleed.
The price examples given were from a few (selected) cases and they looked better than the current system (roadtax). But for the majority the system would be FAR more expensive in comparison. Plus the privacy was another concern, the 'system' would 'know' where your car was at any point in time. And more to come: they could ticket you based on the data in the system, i.e. speeding. One of my concerns was: if the system would be very good like 99.99 % , the number of failed 'transactions' would be still stagering. Where to complain, wait for corrections and so on. Governement projects don't play out well in The Netherlands, they are bad planned, expensive and failing......
The proposal will be introduced slowly as a replacement for the current car and gas tax, however it is most certainly controversial and will be a real test of how far environmentally savvy Dutch citizens will be willing to go to reduce the impact of the car."
Or how much the Dutch will rebel this idea, much like the Brits did a few years ago!
If I work hard to bike, walk, and use transit as much as possible, why should I subsidise your heavy car use?
This is stoopid. If you want to collect revenue based on mileage the tax tires. Really, the cars have to have a MOT inspection yearly so deadbeats will get caught. Put more tax on a 90,000 mile tire than a 40,000 mile tire.
*UNLESS* one of your cronie that contributes to your campaign makes gps boxes. I'm just saying,,,,
And this reflects one of them. See, believe it or not, the people aren't always profoundly wise and thoughtful. Petty grievances and misplaced outrage are quite common.
Politicians will play to this, because fomenting such discord is a way to get out voters, but also avoid provoking it when they can't necessarily get on the right side of it. So...instead of doing what is right and proper, they may do the wrong thing just because their office depends on it.
That is why some jurisdictions favor a one-term limit, so that politicians don't get so dedicated to keeping their job, that they don't genuinely serve the people. And anybody who has had a pet, child, or been in any leadership position will know that the team as a whole may benefit even when the individual is slightly discomfited. Or even that individual. Just had to give my cat some medicine. Brief struggle, but I was doing right for the feline, even if I couldn't explain it in a way that would be understood.
Yes, there are points where it becomes abusive, but there are plenty of others where it is doing the right thing.
You may think it's odious, but I think it's just an unfortunate reflection of the imperfection of humanity. Sometimes things can't be explained, or understood, or even accepted, as easily, until a person realizes, that hey, it's just not that bad.
It is already much cheaper to not use your car than it is to use it. If you primarily bike, and just use your car occasionally (something I've experience with since I bike to work) you have the following financial advantages:
1) Reduced gas costs. This is a big one, and one you can easily notice. If you don't drive, the car does not need gas. If you don't use your car to go to work and only use it for stores out of walking distance, you can easy refuel only once every 2-3 months, and then not even a full tank (gas goes bad if you leave it too long).
2) Lower maintenance costs. Vehicles wear out more with use than with idleness, so use them less, and you need to repair them less. It isn't that they don't need the same things, just that you don't need them as often. Like say you change your oil ever 3000 miles (not that new cars need it that often) and you live in an apartment so can't do it yourself, it costs you $20 to have done. If you drive 15,000 miles a year, you have to do it 5 times a year, $100 expense. Drive 1,000 miles a year and you do it maybe every other year (since oil does have a shelf life), $10/year.
3) Lower insurance costs. This one isn't big, but you do usually save some money if you drive less. They have broad categories of miles driven on a car (like 0-7500, 7500-15000, 15000+) and the lower tiers save you a bit of cash.
4) Lower replacement costs. Since you use the car less, and it wears less, you need to replace it less often. This one isn't something so easy to notice on a normal monthly budget cycle, but it can add up over time. You drive a car heavily and in a couple decades it is likely to need replacement, or major work, no matter what. You drive it occasionally and it can last a much longer time.
5) Not always applicable, but parking costs can be a consideration. If you work somewhere that charges for parking (as I do) or somewhere that doesn't have parking and you have to purchase it from a 3rd party, not driving saves you that cost.
It is already much cheaper to not drive on a regular basis. While I'm certainly not opposed to less taxes for people who drive less, I don't think it would change behaviour any. If people wanted to save money by driving less, they'd do so since you already do save a good deal of money.
This is laughable - what a huge waste of money. Why not just tax gas? That way, the more you drive, the more you pay, the bigger your car/lorry/whatever, the more you pay, sounds fair to me.
But then, the JEW wouldn't be able to follow you around and make sure that you don't stick up 'subversive' posters, or 'say the wrong things' to anybody...
Yes, it was proposed in Oregon. I emailed the elected official that proposes it, and said that he will go to prison if he continues. That seems to have made a difference. I think people in that office recognized that what I said made sense.
The proposal is pure government corruption, partly based on the extreme ignorance of technology of most people who are leaders now. In Oregon, the elected official was given "campaign contributions" from a company that makes GPS tracking devices.
Think about it. GPS location is PURELY a voluntary system. If there is any incentive to cheat, it cannot function. A little aluminum foil on the GPS antenna prevents tracking. What happens if an Oregon car is shown to have been driven in Mongolia during the month? Was that someone cheating, or a technological failure?
What happens if someone drives through streets broadcasting fake GPS satellite signals? Wow! All those cars were in Mongolia at the same time!
See my comment on February 15, 2005, 1) Dupe of a dupe. 2) Stupid. 3) Corrupt.
In the name of Global Warming , which is a fraud, we will end to an orwellian society : each move will be tracked, and then have to be justified. No matter the greenish politicians will say, the data will be collected to spy on all citizens.
I think, and I'm not alone, that governments should me minimalist, with very few taxes, very few (so-called) civil servants, fewer and simpler laws. Just the bare minimum. But sadly this is not the trend.
All of these questions are wrong, all of these proposals are wrong.
Why is the crowd accepting the very premise that government must be involved in any capacity taxing and regulating people's behavior? Why are the roads not privately owned but are so called 'public property' in the first place? Why are people forced to pay taxes on anything rather than paying actual service fees and product costs, buying the products and services on the market?
Why is the crowd here so far to the side of government and not at all wondering why is government involved into anything? Why is government allowed to play any role in the economy? Should you all start asking these questions by now, with everything that you are observing in the economy?
Where is your entrepreneur spirit?
This is weak.
You can't handle the truth.
I don't get it. If this is environmental in motive how is this any better than a tax on fuel? How you drive is as important as how far you drive. This system would seem to ignore this fact completely. There is already a direct link between fuel consumption and distance driven so I fail to see how this helps?
This seems to add comlpexity and cost to an already cost sensitive area.
Really though this is a way for politicians to side-step fuel price issues, which they shouldn't as those issues are real and long term. The consumers need to ask more questions of the suppliers and their profit margins.
So let's see, if something requires gov't money to do, it becomes an expensive tax-payer money wasting boondoggle that only a few would use?
Huh.
I think you're missing a rather obvious part of the situation, namely that the public roads are funded by your tax dollars. You're comfortable with that subsidy, to the point where you're somewhere close to oblivious to it. Yet you oppose other options, because you think that they're always inherently flawed.
Let me clue you into something, just because your local government sucks at running its public transportation, doesn't mean they all do. Ten of thousands of people across the world are using public transportation right now, maybe hundreds, and it may be cleaner, more comfortable, and yes, it might even be running all night. It doesn't even require a large city, but so what if it does? Many many people live there, or want to travel between them. You may not, but you know what? You aren't the only person in the world.
Of course, your use of "we" instead of "I" reflects your inability to understand that maybe, just maybe, the flaw is in how you're doing things, not in the process itself.
Really, you think the private car culture doesn't have its downsides? Try the sprawling parking lots that may not even be enough capacity to serve the potential customers. Try the accidents caused by congestion, the pollution. Try the accidents caused by incompetence.
And it still sucks away the tax-payer dollars like crazy. Or do you think the fuel tax pays for all of it? Not hardly.
Come on, do you really believe that your gas tax will be eliminated if you switch to this system? Oh, come on. Seriously? For real, you are THAT naive about your governments' appetites for money? Money? Government?
You can't handle the truth.
"The instrument could be dimmed, but there was no way of shutting it off completely. ...
WAR IS PEACE
FREEDOM IS SLAVERY
IGNORANCE IS STRENGTH
How is increasing the tax on fuel not doing the same thing without the complicated electronic gizmos and system?
wireless as cell phone data who pays the roaming? or the main data bill?
What about when the GPS says your are on a local road but you are really on the a highway next to it?
What happens when it thinks you are not on road at all due to it not yet being part of the map data?
They are going to impose a carbon tax by taxing the amount you breath. They are going to attach a monitor to your body that tracks your breathing rate and reports it to the government. You will then pay a tax on how much you breath.
In my native country, Road User Charges have been around for a long time, for commercial vehicles and for alternate fuel powered private vehicles. For private cars it was just based on the odometer. For heavy vehicles it was based on hub-odometer (a semi would have two of them, one on the truck and one on the trailer).
So why do you need the complication of GPS?
The previous government in the UK also announced such a scheme though it was dropped in the approach to the elections.
Don't fool yourself that it is only happening in the Netherlands; they're just the first to get there. The ministries of all other western nations are considering such schemes and you can be sure that the EU will be fast tracking it.
After all, such a mechanism will bring forward the day when everyone will be tracked wherever they go and whatever they do - and governments like that idea because, at heart, politicians are totalitarians who want to control everyone else's lives. You can only stop that happening if there is a mechanism built into the system to allow you to stop it and at present there is none. Vote left or right, it makes no difference. You will obey.
So what if I buy an electric car, will this tax be adjusted accordingly to measure the true impact of each car? I agree.. gas tax a WAY better idea.
The problem with your country is that it does not have a balanced budget.
Your taxes may be way lower than they are here in Europe, but your goverment spends thousands of billions more than they get in via taxes, and compensate by printing extra money and borrowing from the Chinese.
That system is going to bust, and then you Americans will have no other choice than to pay realistic taxes to cover the expenses.
last time we heard about this, it was sent into to garbagebin..
To some it might seem like a good thing (for people living in the city where 'public' transportation is good), but for other people it's just a necessity and they'll be the ones that pay the price for nothing.. IMHO the current system is the best, you pay a specific ammount each month dependant on the weight and type of fuel just for having one (next to the ammount you pay every month for insurances which also depends on what kind of car you drive and how many miles), and then you pay for every kilometer you drive (taxes are at 70+% per liter of fuel), so the more your car slurps it's fuel, the more you pay, the more kilometers you drive you pay.. So how stupid must you be not to see that it's the best solution without the need for a VERY expensive administration system which won't work anyway (there are so many ways to corrupt the used system).
How come a simpleton like me can think of all the extra costs and problems and see the current system is working well, whereas people who have studied their whole life and have big degrees can only think up such stupid money hogging problematic systems..
Also let's not forget how much this will impact your privacy..
n/t
Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
How are they supposed to get to work when the cost of a 1 bedroom apartment costs $500,000 downtown?
What about families who need to pick up their kids from Soccer Practice? Vactions etc?
This is Europe folks and the cost of living is very expensive compared to a cheaper place. People who live out in suburbia do so because it is cheaper to live. Now they will be taxed just to show up from work because living close to work is too expensive. Screwed if you do and screwed if you don't.
If I were dutch I would be throwing a fit!
http://saveie6.com/
Gas tax already exists, as does the bureaucracy and the collection mechanism. If they need more revenue just change a number, issue a memo, the tax goes up, the revenue goes up, you still have incentives to buy efficient cars and drive less, all easy and efficient.
Creating a new tax authority, with new electronic boxes, a new collection mechanism that deals with each individual car owner is silly expensive. If the goal is collecting more money the answer is obvious. When the answer chosen by the government is not the obvious one you should wonder, what are they really trying to do?
It took a real world war to end the airplane's patent wars. - Fâché Rouge -
The plan was shelved. Please, next time actually read the articles you're linking to and not just the first paragraph.
Other people will see your headline, ignore the comment section, won't follow the link and will now conclude the system is a go here in NL, without justification.
There is no need for the privacy invasion nor the over technological solution of GPS. Simply tax gasoline and other car fuels as well as collect tolls and get the annual mileage each year to levy the mileage tax. KISS.
The mileage tax is strongly regressive (proportionally larger burden on the poor and middle class.) On average, more expensive cars get worse mileage and thus pay higher fuel taxes. Taxing fuel correlates taxes with pollution, and road damage because those effects increase with vehicle mass (highly correlated with vehicle cost.) A mileage tax is simply one more way of reducing the taxes on the wealthy. Expect to see it stateside soon.
Of course, a fuel tax is also, like the lottery, a stupidity tax. If you use a 4-wheel drive V-8 pickup as your single-passenger urban commuter - as we are want to do here in Dallas/Fort Worth - you pay for it. I personally don't have any problem with stupidity taxes.
Walking or sailing. This is the Netherlands with all those canals and dams.
__
Men with no respect for life must never be allowed to control the ultimate instruments of death.
GW Bu
Tax the fuel.
Doesn't work
Well, except that many many studies have established that it does work. This is called "fuel price elasticity," and it is well known. People drive less when the fuel price is higher. The short-term elasticity is relatively low (because it takes a while for people to change their plans), and a long term elasticity, which is much higher.
http://www.vtpi.org/elasticities.pdf
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
(also, it raises the question, not begs it. That means something else.)
You know, I used to be right there with you and corrected other people's misuse of the term. However, as time progressed I came around. It is much more intuitive (and frequently encountered) to use the improper form of this term. I still say, "begs me to ask" or "begs for the question" but they are unwieldy forms.
Besides, prima facie, the historical denotation of "begging the question" doesn't befit what is actually happening from a common person's perspective. "Question", in this context, is ambiguous for most people who aren't presuming the definition context of debate points. Furthermore, for those who truly beg the question to support an argument, asking questions/speaking tentatively is the furthest thing in their mind (ie. they are often full of zealous conviction).
Thus, I have begun to disambiguate and no longer use "begging the question" and say rather, "You are presuming the point under debate to support your argument", which is unambiguous and parses for everyone.
So, yes, you are correct. However, I think the effort to fight this is misplaced and righteous fury should be reserved for definitions that really matter. You know, like prefixes for data size being in powers of 2 rather than this subversive attempt to change the definition to refer to powers of 10. "MiB?! Over my dead body, you scum..."
Well, except that many many studies have established that it does work.
Well OK, it works, in the same way that deconstructing Mont Blanc with a teaspoon works, eventually, but it's far from the best way to do it. You need to go to experimental psychology, not economics, to deal with issues like this (and lung cancer, and weight problems, and many others). If I wasn't typing this via a borrowed fondle-slab I'd cite some references, but I don't have access to my own machine at the moment. Look up work on behaviour modification, and in particular behavioural risk modification when it's applied to unhealthy living.
Well, except that many many studies have established that [increasing prices to decrease consumption] does work.
Well OK, it works, in the same way that deconstructing Mont Blanc with a teaspoon works, eventually, but it's far from the best way to do it. You need to go to experimental psychology, not economics, to deal with issues like this
I'm sorry, but no. Economics works. Really. It's hard for pychologists to believe that people would be so simple as to use less of a product when it's more expensive, but actually, yes, they do.
There are some products that are perceived luxury goods that have negative elasticity (where increases price is interpreted to imply increased quality), and (of course) these are the things that psychologists tend to be interested in. But commodities, such as gasoline, aren't.
http://www.geoffreylandis.com
Ah yes, the "own to rent" way. Always popular.
The fuel they own.
The tires they own.
The car they own.
The roads they own.
Nothing is community property here.
Government didn't pay to build the roads, and if they did then it wasn't their money.
Thieves threaten you with war if you don't pay them to leave you alone.
Money as the path of most resistance that the people will avoid.
This is a tax on the right of the people to use their property.
Politicians are just like people, they like their fancy high tech toys. Nobody would be impressed if a country bought an iPad, though, so they have to come up with projects like this.
Wow, you can cycle 60 kilometers per hour? I'm impressed. You must be a little damp when you get to your business meeting.
This doesn't make much sense for anything other than perhaps congestion.
Firstly, funding roads. The main benefit to a car user is that the road exists. My parents home has a shared driveway, but despite my neighbour using it far more frequently they both paid the same for it. Given the marginal wear and tear on the drive, this makes sense because what all parties were primarily paying for was access. This is also why it is right that roads are subsidised by general taxation and not only car taxes/licenses - I admit this despite not owning a car since I moved into the city.
Secondly, environmental concerns. Both emissions and the consumption of depleting reserves are important. The latter is clearly tackled most directly through taxation on the fuel. Emissions could potentially be targeted more directly using the Dutch system however the system appears to know only the car's factory certified emissions, distance and route. It does not know the individual's driving style nor the condition of the individual car. Tax on fuel accounts for all of these things to a greater and more direct extent with the exception of the certified emissions. That is a moot point because the individual has no control over the certified emissions other than when he chooses what car to buy, in which case adjusting the car licence fee (and taxable benefit if a company car) based on emissions (as done in UK) performs this action in a manner more easily considered by the purchaser.
Furthermore, tax on fuel is more easily (automatically, even) paid by the driver and means he has a relatively straightforward estimation to make when considering the cost of making a journey. It also does not require the government to be tracking every movement, nor expensive equipment, nor so much administration, nor is it prone to error (or cheating).
The only apparent advantage of the Dutch system is that it can be varied based on time of day and potentially busy routes, which may be useful for managing traffic, but may be prone to being unfathomable by the drivers, i.e. ineffective. There is potential for perverse incentives, particularly government increasing charges for roads not to manage congestion but to maximise revenue. Oh and it may also be more easily subjected to political favouritism, like exempting things like police cars (even though they use roads, congest traffic and emit particles too), some noisy group of motoring voters or indeed politicians' vehicles.
Trying to get people to stop using cars is basically forcing them to reduce their quality of life... There are simply no viable alternatives to many car uses for a lot of people.
This is not what this is about. The fact is there are very viable alternatives to many car uses for a lot of people but they sit their fat arses in a fuel guzzler for the 1min trip to work rather than taking the healthier option of walking or riding. If this were introduced here I'd probably cycle to work for more than I do already, and I know several people at work who are already considering doing so because of the cost of petrol.
Those people who do drive every day have incentives to change their vehicles from something like a giant petrol hungry SUV that has never once left the bitumen to a car that not only is smaller and cheaper to run but more environmentally friendly too which also helps governments appear "green".
In Australia, the ATO lets you novate a lease car on before tax earnings. The catch is, that the amount of Fringe Benefit tax the ATO charges you, is dependent on the amount of kms driven. So the more you drive per year, the more of a tax break you get for leasing. It's never made any sense to me why this is so. Especially, now the the Australian govt, is bringing in a carbon tax.
All of these idiotic ideas to "reduce the consumption" is nothing but BS. Ok...so what happens when everyone is driving "green" vehicles? Did you liberal anti capitalist eco-nuts ever thing that once you do that, there will be no "fossil fuel" taxes (oh pardon me...the "pc" term is revenue) coming in? Ok, how are you going to pay for road repairs & maintenance? It's just like the stupid tobacco taxes. You want those jacked up so people will quit smoking, but they have the taxes tied to "health care" (everyone knows it doesn't go there, but, that is what they tell ignorant people who believe it). There would not be a shortage of fuel, if the stupid EPA would just go kiss off and let the oil prospectors drill where there is oil!
Fan-bloody-tastic!
I thought "lands" was plural?
I am not devoid of humor.
f*** you for trying to control where i drive, when i drive, or how i drive. And p*** off for trying to tax me on how much my car damages the environment, you tested it already didn't you?
wit dat
These are all in general
And thenorth face sale most characteristic creativity order of any of the mark. As mentioned above, the general trademark almost not heard from trademark and copyright court protection of the laws. If the required work, said similar "let me in the work have a try", not said: "yes, of course I can do this", he or she will not get it. These are all in general
And thenorth face sale most characteristic creativity order of any of the mark. As mentioned above, the general trademark almost not heard from trademark and copyright court protection of the laws. If the required work, said similar "let me in the work have a try", not said: "yes, of course I can do this", he or she will not get it. These are all in general
And thenorth face sale most characteristic creativity order of any of the mark. As mentioned above, the general trademark almost not heard from trademark and copyright court protection of the laws. If the required work, said similar "let me in the work have a try", not said: "yes, of course I can do this", he or she will not get it. These are all in general
And thenorth face sale most characteristic creativity order of any of the mark. As mentioned above, the general trademark almost not heard from trademark and copyright court protection of the laws. If the required work, said similar "let me in the work have a try", not said: "yes, of course I can do this", he or she will not get it.
This isn't a new idea from the Netherlands. This is an idea whose proponents have been trying to sell in the US for several years, including trying to sell it to states like California and Oregon, and trying to sell to the Feds, and now they're trying to sell to the Netherlanders.
Sometimes they compare it to fuel taxes (by saying things about poor people not being able to afford Priuses) or to annual flat or per-car-value fees (by saying that those don't track road usage and construction costs), and they never compare it to having your odometer read when you get your car inspected (because that would be too easy), and sometimes they try to tell the Feds or the states that they aren't getting their fair share of the potential tax money (playing them against each other, except when they're trying to present it as revenue-neutral.)
As far as I can tell, it's primarily about building a big expensive monitoring system and selling lots of equipment that everybody would need to buy for their cars, an, and only secondarily about building a monitoring system that users like police will have ready access to, not that the sellers have any problem with doing that either. Issues like revenue generation for states or national governments or road construction agencies are really tertiary parts of their motivation.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
This isn't a new idea from the Netherlands. This is an idea whose proponents have been trying to sell in the US for several years, including trying to sell it to states like California and Oregon, and trying to sell to the Feds, and now they're trying to sell to the Netherlanders.
They can get environmentalists excited about discouraging driving (raising either a fuel tax or annually checking odometers could also do that), and government road building agencies excited about raising taxes on people who use the roads more, and high-tech bloggers excited about arguing the merits of different pricing structures on driver behavior and revenue generation, and police agencies entirely not saying anything out loud about how amazingly cool it would be to have everybody have to buy a system that tracks everywhere they drive, posed as a tax measure, muchcooler than just putting license plates on cars or getting people to buy Fastrack toll transponders or put GPS in their cell phones.
It's a scam now, and it's been a scam since the beginning. It requires expensive equipment in every car and an expensive infrastructure to monitor the equipment, so it's also not revenue-neutral as a tax collection methodology. And at least here in California, we already have a serious mess about how different kinds of taxes get allocated between the state, cities, counties, and state transportation agencies, and they were trying to use that as a way to play the different levels of government off against each other so that at least one of them would be greedy enough to buy this thing.
Bill Stewart
New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks