Public opposition to fuel taxes in Europe: how important is social disadvantage and how do welfare regimes compare?
Fuel taxes are seen as an important instrument in the fight against climate change, including in the European
Green Deal. From a social-ecological policy perspective, it is important to understand current high levels of
public opposition to fuel taxes. If social disadvantage is an important driver of opposition, this would
strengthen arguments that fuel taxes need to be designed in a fairer way. However, it remains unclear how
important social disadvantage – here defined as a combination of low income, fuel poverty risk, low education,
low occupational status and job insecurity – is for explaining opposition compared to factors such as political
trust and climate change attitudes, and how the role of social disadvantage varies with welfare regimes in
Europe. In this article, we examine how strongly social disadvantage is associated with opposition to fuel taxes
once political trust and climate change attitudes are controlled for, and we compare results across welfare
regimes. The article uses data from the 2016 European Social Survey and employs logistic regression and
decomposition analysis. We find that social disadvantage contributes nearly as much to fuel tax opposition as
climate change attitudes and political trust together, with 10.9 and 16.6 percentage points respectively.
However, the role of social disadvantage varies by welfare regime. It matters most in Southern and Eastern
Europe, where opposition is particularly high, as are poverty and inequality. We discuss implications for
social-ecological policy strategies that aim to increase public acceptability of fuel taxes in Europe.
BUCHS Milena;
BASTIANELLI Elena;
SCHNEPF Sylke;
2025-07-03
SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
JRC129471
1461-7269 (online),
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC129471,
10.1177/09589287241270942 (online),
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