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Green posturing drives up tax burden for families

22nd March 2007 Print
Chancellor Gordon Brown moved to out-green the Tories and boost government coffers by sending road tax for higher emitting cars through the roof. SMMT estimates a bonanza of £44.5m for number 11 Downing Street over the next two years through changes to vehicle excise duty (VED) that will raise the annual charge for band G cars by 90 per cent. That means all new cars emitting more than 225 g/km CO2, half of which are not 4x4s.

'The chancellor and the green lobby may have convinced the public that this will affect rich drivers in central London,' said SMMT chief executive Christopher Macgowan. 'The truth is that many thousands of people across the UK who rely on larger-engined vehicles, like families, farmers and small business people, face another hike in motoring bills in the years to come.'

The motor industry is not opposed to CO2-based taxation. In the last five years, strong signals on company car tax, vehicle excise duty and fuel tax (the lion's share of annual motoring costs), have helped support manufacturers' investment to bring lower carbon cars to market.

'We have called for stability, clarity and a long-term approach to CO2-based taxation,' said Macgowan. 'What we heard today was the opposite. This is gesture politics at its most cynical.'