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Minister stands by GST on green goods

Minister stands by GST on green goods

Wednesday 24 May 2023

Minister stands by GST on green goods

Wednesday 24 May 2023


The Environment Minister has stood by the Government continuing to charge GST on e-bikes and electric cars.

Responding to a question from Deputy Montfort Tadier during yesterday's States Assembly meeting about incentives for islanders to make behavioural changes to help the environment, Deputy Jonathan Renouf said the island had a "low, broad and simple principle with our taxation and GST fits into that".

The Minister said it was "justified" to apply the 5% tax on green products, and pointed to various other "targeted measures" to achieve the wide-ranging changes needed to reach Jersey’s net-zero aims.

A pilot scheme converting oil-fired boilers to biofuel was being developed, he added.

This is in addition to a subsidy scheme offering up to £10,000 per household to replace oil-fired boilers.

Deputy Renouf said this scheme was a "far better use of government funds".

There have previously been calls for GST to be scrapped on green goods.

In December 2020, the then-Treasury Minister, Susie Pinel, was tasked with analysing the effect of scrapping GST on a number of environmentally friendly goods, after States Members supported an amendment to the Government Plan proposed by Deputy Rob Ward.

Rob Ward.jpg

Pictured: Deputy Rob Ward asked the previous Treasury Minister to investigate removing GST from eco-friendly items, such as solar panels, electric bikes, insulation and double glazing, but the idea was not supported.

However, she concluded that zero-rating the list proposed by Deputy Ward and other States Members – including solar panels, electric cars and loft insulation – wouldn’t be an effective way to encourage more environmentally friendly practices.

“[I] remain convinced that reductions in GST are not effective in encouraging the take-up of environmentally-friendly products due to Jersey’s low - 5% - rate of GST," Deputy Pinel commented at the time.

“The incentive created by zero-rating would be too little to affect the purchasing decisions of lower-income households and a needless bonus for higher- income households which are more likely in any event to invest in such goods.

“Were the Government to incentivise take-up of such products, I may be more inclined to support any investigation of schemes which subsidised the use of environmentally-friendly goods by lower-income households while maintaining the GST rate on such goods.”

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