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Environmental taxes by economic activity (NACE Rev. 2) (env_ac_taxind2)

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National Reference Metadata in Single Integrated Metadata Structure (SIMS)

Compiling agency: Swiss Federal Statistical Office (FSO)

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Data presents environmental tax revenue (by tax category - energy, transport, pollution and resource taxes) broken down by economic activity (tax payer), using the NACE classification for production activities extended to cover taxes payable by households and non-residents.

30 April 2025

 The environmental tax statistics are compiled based on Eurostat’s 2024 'Environmental taxes - a statistical guide'. Environmental tax is defined as "A tax whose tax base is a physical unit (or a proxy of a physical unit) of something that has a proven, specific negative impact on the environment, and which is identified in ESA2010 as a tax".

Environmental tax statistics are part of European environmental economic accounts, which constitute satellite accounts to national accounts. Thus, environmental tax statistics follows ESA2010 definition of ‘taxes’. Consequently, only payments that are identified as taxes in the national accounts can be reported as environmental taxes whereas other types of payments to government are not excluded from the scope of the data collection. Compliance with the tax definition of the national accounts improves international comparability of the statistics, and is in line with the guidance, concepts and definitions of the System of environmental and economic accounting (SEEA).

Data refer to environmental taxes collected by the government and payable by the different economic agents.

The target population are all production sectors by NACE, households as consumers and non-residents.

Switzerland

The data refer to the calendar years.

This statistic is based on the best available data. However, there are some known deficiencies and the applied methodology is in a permanent process of improvement. The accuracy of the results depends on the data sources used for the allocation of taxes’ revenues to the entities paying the taxes as well as on the relative importance of the tax revenues considered. For example, accuracy is limited in the cases where the allocation of the tax revenue is based on data which correlate only to a certain degree with the tax base.

Million National Currency (MNAC)

Some totals and subtotals (e.g. NACE section) are derived by summing data at a more disaggregated level (e.g. NACE positions).

Some administrative data sources are sometimes used, when available, for allocating taxes by economic activity. This is the case, for example, for data used to allocate the CO2 levy on fossil fuels (combustible), for which each reimbursement is registered by the Federal Office for the Environment (FOEN), with administrative data (name, address, etc.) related to the enterprise that benefits from a reimbursement of the tax. Such information allow to identify the economic activity of each enterprise quite precisely by matching it with the Business and Enterprise Register (BER).

The Household Budget Survey (HBS) is used as a first step for allocating some taxes between the households and the economy. It is a random survey, spread out across the seven major regions of Switzerland. About 3000 households take part each year. They are chosen randomly from the Swiss Federal Statistical Office (FSO) random sample register. Household data is weighted according to the including probability as well as taking into account certain other variables which may lead to a household not taking part in the survey. A calibration method based on the known distribution of the Swiss population is applied. It enables to compensate for a possible bias in the selection of households. The HBS results are therefore based on a household structure, which accurately represents the permanent resident population in Switzerland.

Statistical estimations are used in some cases in which no other data source is available. For example, information about the allocation of the revenue by economic activity is not available for the whole time frame for some taxes. This is the case, for example, for data used to allocate the incentive tax on volatile organic compounds (VOC), which is collected only every three years. For the missing years among the surveys, the allocation by economic activity is estimated with regression analysis.

See 8.1

See 14.1.2.

All the considered taxes have a tax base that is mentioned in the statistical guide on environmental taxes. Moreover, there are no taxes described in the handbook that are not covered or deliberately excluded from the transmitted data.

There are no changes in the statistical process over time. Thus, by using a common framework, data are comparable over time.