German transport minister considers cutting VAT on train tickets
Bild Zeitung
German transport minister Andreas Scheuer intends to cut the value added tax (VAT) on long-distance train tickets in a bid to make railroad travel more attractive and reduce carbon emissions in the country鈥檚 transport sector. In an with the tabloid Bild Zeitung, Scheuer said the government aims to increase the number of train travellers to 150 million per year. 鈥淭o achieve this and make trains more attractive, we need to reduce the VAT on tickets from 19 to 7 percent on long-distance trains,鈥 he said. According to the newspaper, this would reduce the price of a train ticket from Berlin to Munich from 153 euros to about 129 euros, saving customers around 24 euros per ride. 鈥淚f we are serious about climate action and want people to swap cars and airplanes for trains, we need to begin with taxation,鈥 Scheuer argued.
Rail transport group Allianz pro Schiene Scheuer鈥檚 proposal, calling it 鈥渁n important signal for greater climate action in the transport sector鈥 that both short and long distance rail travel are taxed at 7 percent VAT. The pro-rail alliance said the minister is adopting an important idea of Germany鈥檚 transport commission, adding that it鈥檚 crucial not to disadvantage train tickets vis-脿-vis airplane tickets, which in the case of international connections are currently not taxed at all.
Reducing emissions in the transport sector has proven particularly difficult for Germany, where the carbon footprint of cars, planes and other means of transportation has聽 remained largely stagnant since 1990. The national transport commission was tasked with proposing ways to bring down the sector鈥檚 greenhouse gas output. But Scheuer has been criticised for failing to fully support the body鈥檚 work, and after months of controversial negotiations, the commission鈥檚 proposal, released in late March, does not contain sufficient measures to reach Germany鈥檚 transport emissions reduction targets.聽