ABSTRACT
New Zealand’s primary strategy for tackling greenhouse gas emissions is the emissions trading scheme, which puts a price on emissions from all major industries – except animal agriculture. In the decade since the scheme was introduced, conversations about including emissions from animal agriculture have been shrouded in controversy, with a levy on such emissions dubbed a ‘fart tax’. Across two independent samples of New Zealanders, we examined whether support for a charge on farm emissions differed depending on how the charge was framed. We showed that participants were more supportive of including farm emissions in the existing scheme than supporting a ‘fart tax’, and also that the description of the policy that most closely aligned with the Labour Party’s original proposal for the charge (a levy on the agricultural sector to fund research into low carbon farming practices) garnered the most support. Across both samples, support also varied by political affiliation, with support highest among Green voters, followed by Labour voters, and National voters generally opposing the charge, regardless of framing. Frames did not interact with political affiliation in the expected way, suggesting that ‘fart tax’ referencing reaches across the political divide in undermining support for this policy.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Samantha K. Stanley
Samantha K. Stanley. Stanley is a Research Fellow at the Australian National University. Her research interests include environmental and political psychology.
John R. Kerr
John R. Kerr. Kerr is a Post-doctoral Research Associate affiliated with the Department of Psychology at the University of Cambridge. His research focuses on attitudes towards publicly debated scientific issues.
Marc S. Wilson
Marc S. Wilson is a Professor in the School of Psychology at Victoria University of Wellington. He is interested in the application of social psychological theory to important social issues, including New Zealand politics and political psychology, voting, and public opinion.