Raise the gas tax. A lot.
For
32 years I’ve been advocating a major tax on petroleum. I’ve got as
much chance this time around as did Don Quixote with windmills. But I
shall tilt my lance once more.
The only time you can even think of proposing a gas tax increase is when oil prices are at rock bottom. When I last suggested the idea six years ago, oil was selling at $40 a barrel. It eventually rose back to $110. It’s now around $48. Correspondingly, the price at the pump has fallen in the last three months by more than a dollar to about $2.20 per gallon.
As a result, some in Congress
are talking about a 10- or 20-cent hike in the federal tax to use for
infrastructure spending. Right idea, wrong policy. The hike should not
be 10 cents but $1. And the proceeds should not be spent by, or even
entrusted to, the government. They should be immediately and entirely
returned to the consumer by means of a cut in the Social Security tax.
The
average American buys about 12 gallons of gas a week. Washington would
be soaking him for $12 in extra taxes. Washington should therefore
simultaneously reduce everyone’s FICA tax by $12 a week. Thus the
average driver is left harmless. He receives a $12-per-week FICA bonus
that he can spend on gasoline if he wants — or anything else. If he
chooses to drive less, it puts money in his pocket. (The unemployed
would have the $12 added to their unemployment insurance; the elderly,
to their Social Security check.)
The point of the $1 gas tax increase is not to feed the maw of a government raking in $3 trillion a year.
The point is exclusively to alter incentives — to reduce the
disincentive for work (the Social Security tax) and to increase the
disincentive to consume gasoline.
It’s
win-win. Employment taxes are a drag on job creation. Reducing them not
only promotes growth but advances fairness, FICA being a regressive tax
that hits the middle and working classes far more than the rich.
As for oil, we remain the world champion consumer. We burn more than 20 percent of global output, almost twice as much as the next nearest gas guzzler, China.
A
$1 gas tax increase would constrain oil consumption in two ways. In the
short run, by curbing driving. In the long run, by altering car-buying
habits. A return to gas-guzzling land yachts occurs every time gasoline
prices plunge. A high gas tax encourages demand for more fuel-efficient
vehicles. Constrained U.S. consumption — combined with already huge
increases in U.S. production — would continue to apply enormous downward
pressure on oil prices.
A
tax is the best way to improve fuel efficiency. Today we do it through
rigid regulations, the so-called CAFE standards imposed on carmakers.
They are forced to manufacture acres of unsellable cars in order to meet
an arbitrary, bureaucratic “fleet” gas-consumption average.
This
is nuts. If you simply set a higher price point for gasoline, buyers
will do the sorting on their own, choosing fuel efficiency just as they
do when the world price is high. The beauty of the tax — as a substitute
for a high world price — is that the incentive for fuel efficiency
remains, but the extra money collected at the pump goes right back into
the U.S. economy (and to the citizenry through the revenue-neutral FICA
rebate) instead of being shipped overseas to Russia, Venezuela, Iran and
other unsavories.
Which is a geopolitical coup. Cheap oil is the most effective and efficient instrument known to man for weakening these oil-dependent miscreants.
And
finally, lower consumption reduces pollution and greenhouse gases. The
reduction of traditional pollutants, though relatively minor, is an
undeniable gain. And even for global warming skeptics, there’s no reason
not to welcome a benign measure that induces prudential reductions in
CO2 emissions.
The
unexpected and unpredicted collapse of oil prices gives us a unique
opportunity to maintain our good luck through a simple, revenue-neutral
measure to help prevent the perennial price spikes that follow the
fool’s paradise of ultra-cheap oil.
We’ve
blown this chance at least three times since the 1980s. As former
French foreign minister Jean François-Poncet said a quarter-century ago,
“It’s hard to take seriously that a nation has deep problems if they
can be fixed with a 50-cent-a-gallon” — 90 cents in today’s money —
“gasoline tax.” Let’s not blow it again.
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