Solidarity tax on airplane tickets (France)
The "Solidarity Tax on airplane tickets" (Taxe de solidarité sur les billets d'avion, also known as Chirac Tax) is a surcharge on the civil aviation tax which is destined to finance Unitaid. This tax was initially proposed by Presidents Jacques Chirac of France and Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva of Brazil. It was initially adopted by five founding countries (France, Brazil, United Kingdom, Norway and Chile) during a conference in Paris on September 14 2005. Nine countries actually implemented this tax: Cameroon, Chile, Congo, France, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Niger and the Republic of Korea. Norway also contributes through its tax on CO2 emissions.[1]
History
The tax was first proposed by French president Jacques Chirac and his Brazilian counterpart Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. It was later adopted by five countries at the Ministerial conference on innovative development finance held in Paris in February 2005.[2]
Details
The tax is applied selectively depending on the final destination. Transit passengers are exempt under the following conditions;
- The arrival and departure are from the same airport
- Maximum of 24 hours between arrival and departure
- The final destination is not the same as the airport of origin
The tax depends on the destination, either European Economic Area or outside EEA.
Economy Class | Business or First Class | |
---|---|---|
Destination within EEA | €1.13 | €11.27 |
Destination outside EEA | €4.51 | €45.07 |
The tax raises approximately €160 million per year and since its introduction has raised over €1 billion.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Unitaid Innovative financing
- ↑ "International solidarity levy on air tickets - Leading Group on Innovative Financing for Development". Leadinggroup.org. Retrieved 2014-01-01.
- ↑ "The Fondation Chirac applauds the increase in the solidarity contribution on airline tickets | Fondation Chirac". Fondationchirac.eu. 2013-07-31. Retrieved 2014-01-01.