August 18, 2009
A Fee by Any Other Name
by Kail Padgitt
The City of London is claiming that the US Embassy currently owes them $5.7 million dollars in unpaid congestion charges. The City of London charges drivers 8 pounds per day for driving in the city center during peak hours. The US Embassy does not seem to dispute the fact that employees are driving in the city center during these hours. The dispute is over whether this is a tax or a fee. The US Embassy is claiming that the congestion pricing is tax and thus they are not obliged to pay it. The City of London is that this reperesents a fee.
The Tax Foundation holds that any assessment that raises money in excess of what is needed to defray costs is a tax, not a fee. It should be noted that City of London created 70 million pounds of surplus revenue last year. Whether the US Embassy should pay tax is another matter.
The Tax Policy Blog is the official weblog of the Tax Foundation, a non-partisan, non-profit research organization that has monitored tax policy at the federal, state and local levels since 1937. Our economists welcome your feedback. If you would like to send an e-mail to the author of a blog post, please click on that person's name to locate his or her e-mail address or visit our staff page here.

Monthly Archives
Disclaimer: All views expressed on the Tax Foundation’s Tax Policy Blog are those of the individual authors, and do not necessarily represent the views of the Tax Foundation, its Board of Directors, or its financial contributors. The Tax Foundation makes no representation concerning the views expressed, and does not guarantee the source, originality, accuracy, completeness or reliability of any statement, information, data, finding, interpretation, advice, opinion, or view presented.