Economists Against Gas Tax
By Justin Gardner | Related entries in 2008 Election, Barack, Democrats, Economy, Hillary, McCainBrookings’ Henry Aaron sends over a statement (.pdf) signed today by 150 economists opposing the gas tax holiday.They include Nobelists Joe Stiglitz, James Heckman and Daniel Kahneman, as well as a Clinton O.M.B. director, Alice Rivlin, and Robert Shapiro, the chief economic adviser to Bill Clinton’s 1992 campaign.
Here’s the statement from the economists (linked above)…
In recent weeks, there have been proposals in Congress and by some presidential candidates to suspend the gas tax for the summer. As economists who study issues of energy policy, taxation, public finance, and budgeting, we write to indicate our opposition to this policy. Put simply, suspending the federal tax on gasoline this summer is a bad idea and we oppose it.There are several reasons for this opposition. First, research shows that waiving the gas tax would generate major profits for oil companies rather than significantly lowering prices for consumers. Second, it would encourage people to keep buying costly imported oil and do nothing to encourage conservation. Third, a tax holiday would provide very little relief to families feeling squeezed. Fourth, the gas tax suspension would threaten to increase the already record deficit in the coming year and reduce the amount of money going into the highway trust fund that maintains our infrastructure.
9 of the economists are members of faculty of Indiana University.
More as it develops…
This entry was posted on Saturday, May 3rd, 2008 and is filed under 2008 Election, Barack, Democrats, Economy, Hillary, McCain. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.









May 3rd, 2008 at 8:37 am
Those who vote Obama need the Obama style help …
This photo was on the news this morning …
http://www.thebasicsabout.com/Obama/M-Obama2.jpg
Right in the FRONT ROW ….
May 3rd, 2008 at 9:44 am
It sounds like these economists favor high gas prices generally. When gas goes over $4.00/gallon this summer, nobody should complain. This is good I guess, because high gas prices should never be an issue again. Hell, lets increase the tax to an arbitrary number so it would prevent people from buying gas altogether. That way, oil companies wouldn’t get any profits at all.
May 3rd, 2008 at 11:16 am
Gas is not high the dollar is falling! Punch the price of gas from 1980 of $1.30 into a inflation calculator price in 2007 =$3.95. Put the price of milk from 1929 .45c –price today should be $5.95.Ya know why you can’t live on one wage. Punch the wage of a journeyman grocery clerk $7.50 in 1971 the result $42 is what a clerk should make in 2007 , now in 2008 $44. In 2008 the Fed stole $200 dollars a day from the worker by printing money. Think a GM worker is overpaid now?
May 5th, 2008 at 6:22 am
It seems to me that we should be collecting much higher royalties on the oil. The national treasury deserves these funds, not the Jed Clampetts and the Exxon-Mobils. Neither of them had any more role in creating the oil in the ground than any other individual or corporation, and it is just plain wrong for them to be permitted to treat this increasingly scarce and very important NATURAL resource as if they had somehow been involved in its creation.
Collecting higher royalties would not change the price gas at the pump by a penny — but it would put funds in our common coffers instead of in private pockets — and those private pockets aren’t entitled by any logic I can defend.
I happen to agree that lowering the gas tax temporarily would be a mistake. The consumer would see no benefit, and we’d need to make up for the lost revenue with other taxes that would be equally or more injurious to our economy.
What we really need to do is get our entire incentive system straightened out. My study suggests that the answer starts with Land Value Taxation. Check out http://www.wealthandwant.com/, http://www.answersanswers.com and http://lvtfan.typepad.com for more information.
May 5th, 2008 at 6:59 am
From today’s Wall Street Journal: