Indonesia proposes to tax polluting cars, plastic and sweet drinks

Indrawati said the tariffs on vehicles would vary depending on emission levels and other aspects. — Reuters


UPDATE: 

Indonesia’s parliament today told the government to tax a wider range of plastic products than it had proposed, but held off on the administration’s plans to levy sweet drinks and polluting vehicles.

 

JAKARTA: Indonesia’s finance minister proposed today new duties on vehicles that emit carbon dioxide, sweetened drinks and plastic bags, to control consumption of the products in South-East Asia’s largest economy.

Sri Mulyani Indrawati’s proposal comes amid weak tax collection after the economy grew at its slowest pace in three years in 2019. Indonesia had a nearly US$15 billion revenue shortfall last year due to weak company profits and falling exports.

The government wants to impose duties on new vehicles that emit carbon dioxide as part of efforts to control pollution, the minister said. The tariffs would vary depending on emission levels and other aspects, she said, without providing details.

The proposal would also levy excise taxes ranging from 1,500 rupiah to 2,500 rupiah ($0.11-$0.18) per litre on sugar- and artificial sugar-sweetened beverages, such as bottled tea, coffee, carbonated soft drinks and energy drinks, she told a hearing with parliament’s finance commission.

The aim is to cut consumption of sweet drinks, Indrawati said, arguing that the prevalence of diabetes and obesity levels have steadily increased in the past decade.

Some 2% of Indonesians age 15 and above suffer from diabetes in 2018, up from 1.1% in 2007, while the number of obese adults rose from 10.5% in 2007 to 21.8% in 2018.

Indrawati also brought up again her 2017 proposal to impose an excise tax of 200 rupiah per bag on plastic bags, which parliament has not approved yet. The levy, though small, can halve Indonesia’s consumption of plastic bags to 53,533 tonnes a year, she argued.

The total additional revenue expected from all three measures per fiscal year is 23.56 trillion rupiah or about US$1.72 billion - 1.61 trillion rupiah from plastic bags, 6.25 trillion rupiah from drinks and 15.7 trillion rupiah from vehicles, she said.

Indrawati did not say when the government plans to begin collecting the excise taxes.

Chairman of the Indonesian Food & Beverage Association Adhi S. Lukman said the proposal would jack up prices and hurt people’s purchasing power.

“Basically, there is no data that shows applying excise will reduce the risk of non-communicable diseases and obesity, if that’s the intention,” he told Reuters, adding that he would lobby against the measure.
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