Monday, March 15, 2010

Litter Tax

I see so much crap strewn on the side of the road walking from my office to get coffee, lunch, or whatever. It looks terrible, and it pains me that people are just willing to drop their garbage on the ground, or throw it out the window of their passing car. I would like to put more of the responsibility for this on producers, but that seems unlikely. Today it hit me that the solution is simply to expand the deposit system used for beer bottles to packaging.

It would take some doing to implement such a measure. There would have to be some establishment of what this tax should apply to. A cursory review of what I see on the side of the road is probably a good place to start. Fast food items – from the drink container to the bag it comes in would all have to be taxed. On top of that, things available from convenience stores: chips, bottled things, cigarette packages and the like. All of these things should add 10 cents each to the cost of whatever is being bought. This money would be transferred to a government account to repay people when they returned their items.

Now obviously it would be very resource intensive for each company to set up their own collection centres, but having a tax instead of a deposit solves this problem. The government could simply set up generic collection facilities and repay people for any items which they return. Surplus revenue stays with the government to fund whatever it takes to make this program politically saleable.

For 10 cents an item, this may not change the behaviour of people who just really want to get rid of their McDonald’s bag as they drive down the highway, but it would certainly provide an incentive for people to pick up garbage on their own initiative. If people are willing to go through the trash and recycling looking for beer bottles to return, they also seem likely to walk the streets picking up trash which could be returned.

I don’t have a good idea on how to pay for the infrastructure and wages out of the proceeds collected, but I suppose we can always raise taxes!

1 comment:

Unknown said...

Well, outside of Ontario, pretty much every province in Canada already has deposits on non-alcoholic beverage containers. I think they are generally around 5 - 10 cents, which is enough that most people won't discard them, and if they do, someone else is willing to collect them for the money.

The real question is why Ontario is unwilling to join the rest of the provinces in encouraging people to deal with their waste responsibly.