By Ralph R. Reiland on 1.9.09 @ 6:05AM
Those who drive, drive. Those who don't, tax.
Unhappy that we're no longer paying $80 for a fill-up, the
New York Times wants to get the price back up to $4 or
$5 a gallon by way of a hefty hike in federal taxes.
The problem, according to a recent Times editorial,
is that "President-elect Barack Obama and the Democrats in
Congress seem to have a clear vision of the auto industry they
think the country needs," i.e., car companies that produce
"highly fuel-efficient, next-generation vehicles." But the
American public might not buy those government-commanded vehicles
if gasoline is too cheap.
So to "help the nation cope with climate change and finite
supplies of oil," the answer at the Times isn't to
increase oil supplies by removing Times-supported
restrictions on domestic drilling, or to determine if the science
behind global warming is suspect, or to ascertain whether the
alleged warming is even man-made or, more particularly, car-made.
Instead, the Times wants a new $2- to $3-per-gallon tax
on gasoline and offers two methods. First, federal planners could
"devise a variable consumption tax in such a way that a gallon of
unleaded gasoline at the pump would never go below a floor of $4
or $5 (in 2008 dollars), fluctuating to accommodate changing oil
prices and other costs." Second, the Times points to Harvard
economist Robert Lawrence's proposal to put "a variable tariff on
imported oil to achieve the same effect."
Either way, the Times is proposing a huge jump in the
current federal tax on gasoline of 18.4 cents a gallon. Here in
Pennsylvania, home ground of many who picked up their
revolutionary muskets to liberate themselves from excessive
taxation, there's an additional 31.1 cents per gallon in state
gasoline taxes.
"If gas stays cheap, Americans would be less inclined to squeeze
their families into a lithe fuel-efficient alternative," warns
the Times. "Americans did not buy enormous gas guzzlers
just because Detroit marketed them relentlessly. They bought them
because they wanted big cars -- and because gas was cheap."
What matters, in short, is not what we want but what the
Times thinks we need.
To help lessen the burden of their proposed increase in gas
taxes, a regressive levy that hits the poor more than the rich,
the Times says that "fuel taxes could be offset with tax
credits to protect vulnerable segments of the population."
And who decides who's "vulnerable"? The same politicians who,
seeking new targets for taxation during the presidential
campaign, defined "the rich" as any family earning more than
$200,000, and then $150,000, and then $100,000?
In deciding in central planning who is "vulnerable" enough for a
tax credit, will a $30,000-per-year carpenter who needs a truck
for work get more money back than a $30,000-a-year store clerk
who can get away with driving a little tin can to work? Will we
have to send in our mileage and gas receipts to get reimbursed?
Will a bachelor landscaper lose his gas-tax credits if he marries
a rich perfume designer? What if he marries a lottery winner and
she's a one-hit wonder?
And what if we live an hour or two from work -- not like those
guys at the Times who ride five blocks in a cab from their
Manhattan condos to the office? Do we get extra tax credits if
the driving is work-related as opposed to just driving around at
night listening to Jay-Z?
What about two fatties who get fewer miles per gallon than one
anorexic? Should an intelligent gas policy punish those who are
doing more than their share to keep people employed at their
local bakeries?
Personally, I'd like a gas policy that's less punitive, such as
drilling off Nantucket or making the grill on an electric car out
of hundreds of little chrome fans so that the battery would
automatically recharge while we're driving, or using part of
Obama's proposed $1 trillion in infrastructure spending to build
a bullet train that'll get us from Pittsburgh to a bar in
Greenwich Village in an hour (the new French TGV train smashed
the world's speed record last year, hitting 357.2 mph, nearly
half the speed of sound).
And who's going to figure all this out? Nancy Pelosi and Barney
Frank, the same people who thought that the best way to get
people into their own homes was through no-income, no-assets
loans?
topics:
Taxes, Gasoline