A barrier to sustainable transports? Path dependence and the Swedish tax deduction for commuting

Author:

Pettersson Thomas1ORCID,Jansson Johan2,Lindgren Urban3

Affiliation:

1. Unit of Economic History, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden

2. Umeå School of Business and Economics, Department of Business Administration, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden

3. Department of Geography, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden

Abstract

We explore the decisions in Parliament about the Swedish tax deduction for commuting since the 1980s. The aim is to explain the continuity of the tax regulation despite several attempts from motions in Parliament and public investigations to reform it towards environmental goals, e.g., reduced emissions of CO2. When reforms have been proposed, the political majority in Parliament has regardless of political colour voted against and retreated to the original motives for the tax deduction; economic growth and the enlargement of regional labour markets. The interests of Swedish mass motorisation succeeded in finding the arguments to slow down reforms and at the same time reinforce the path dependency by adding new legitimacy to the regulation. If the attempts to reform the tax deduction had been part of a broader reform of the transport sector and the tax system, they might have succeeded in breaking with the old path.

Funder

Riksbankens Jubileumsfond

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Transportation,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference42 articles.

1. Archival sources

2. Riksarkivet Stockholm [National Archives of Sweden in Stockholm], Finans- och budgetdepartementet, Huvudarkivet, Regeringsakter, Underserie A, 1975–1996, 2733, 2734.

3. Published sources

4. Transferring Technology--Shaping Ideology: American Traffic Engineering and Commercial Interests in the Establishment of a Swedish Car Society, 1945-1965

5. Automotive Modal Lock-in: The role of path dependence and large socio-economic regimes in market failure

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