Fw: Obama lying about Clinton's gas tax plan - please forward Liz
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| From: | Liz Nottingham |
| Sent on: | Tuesday, May 6 at 11:16 AM |
Obama is wrong about the gas tax
Think Clinton's plan to
suspend the gas tax temporarily is a bad idea? A similar measure in Illinois --
which Obama backed -- seems to have helped consumers.
By George Frost
May. 06, 2008 | Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama has
repeatedly accused rival Hillary Clinton of "pandering" for advocating a summer gas-tax moratorium, calling it a "classic
Washington gimmick" that would do little to help consumers.
"That's typical of how Washington works," Obama says in a new TV ad airing
in Indiana, where primary voters go to the polls Tuesday. "There's a problem.
Everybody's upset about gas prices. Let's find some short-term quick fix that we
can say we did something even though ... we're not really doing anything."
Obama dismisses Clinton's proposal to suspend the 18.4 cent per gallon
federal gas tax as: 1) a political gimmick that will not deliver any significant
relief to consumers, while diverting us from the serious energy reforms we need
to undertake; 2) an opportunity for oil companies to raise prices to capture the
missing tax increment; 3) an inducement to drivers to drive more, thus leading
to more consumption and higher prices down the road; and 4) a drain on highway
trust funding, which is sorely needed to repair our crumbling infrastructure.
This is powerful criticism because it resonates with a long-standing
talking point against Clinton -- that she is a political phony willing to do
anything to get elected.
But in this case, each of Obama's attack lines is either factually
incorrect, or based on flawed logic. Could he be attacking Clinton just to deny
her any political benefit? That would be as cynical and "old style" as anything
Clinton has thrown at Obama lately.
American drivers are hurting, especially those who must drive a lot --
commuters, truckers, carpool moms. Millions of lower-income rural and exurban
Americans must drive long distances to their jobs, meaning high gas prices take
a disproportionately large chunk out of their incomes. Some are having to choose
between gasoline and food. A savings of $30 or $50 is a significant amount of
cash for at least some Americans.
Despite the "gimmick" slam on Clinton, could it be that Clinton is
sincerely trying to help, albeit in a very modest, and politically self-serving
way? The evidence suggests that Clinton's plan might work. It also raises the
question of why Obama hasn't made a similar proposal. He was certainly proud to
back a gas-tax moratorium eight years ago.
While an Illinois state senator, Obama supported a state tax holiday very
much like Clinton's proposal, but without the saving mechanism of a windfall
profits tax.
CBS News says Obama voted for the temporary lifting of the tax three times
in the state Senate. The tax holiday was finally approved during a special
session in June of 2000, when Illinois motorists were furious that gas prices
had just topped $2 a gallon in Chicago. The moratorium lifted the state's 5
percent sales tax on gasoline through the end of 2000.
Obama told constituents that gasoline prices would drop: "Gas retailers
must post on each pump a statement that indicates that the state tax has been
suspended and that this temporary elimination of the tax should be reflected in
the price per gallon of gas."
During one state Senate floor debate, Obama joked that he wanted signs on
gas pumps in his district to say, "Senator Obama reduced your gasoline prices."
Now, running for president, Obama says the tax reduction was a complete
failure, and that "the oil companies, the retailers" ended up benefiting most
because they raised prices by the entire amount of the tax cut.
"I voted for it, and then six months later we took a look, and consumers
had not benefited at all," Obama said. Having learned this hard economics lesson
from his Illinois "mistake," Obama now argues that a federal tax holiday also
will fail for the same reason -- the oil companies will take it all.
But Obama is wrong. He did not learn this lesson. In fact, the only
scientific study done on the pass-through of the tax holiday savings to Illinois
consumers (and those in Indiana, as well, whose citizens enjoyed a similar
holiday) found that it actually worked to a large extent.
The study is titled "$2.00 Gas! Studying the Effects of a Gas Tax
Moratorium," by Joseph J. Doyle Jr. and Krislert Samphantharak. Download the PDF
here. The authors concluded that "the suspension of the
5% sales tax led to decreases in retail prices of 3% compared to neighboring
states. And when the tax was reinstated, retail prices rose by roughly 4%."
This suggests that the tax holiday delivered at least 60 percent of the tax
savings to motorists.
The economic basis for attacks on the Clinton tax holiday is a fundamental
economic theory called "tax incidence." It says that the cost of a tax on any
consumer product will be borne by those with lesser "elasticity" in the tug of
war between suppliers and consumers. "Tax incidence" falls mostly upon the group
that responds least to price -- the group that has the more inelastic
price-quantity curve. In this instance, assuming that the supply of gas is
pretty much fixed, it means consumers will end up paying those missing tax
dollars directly to the gas companies in the form of higher prices. The
increased demand triggered by the price cut will supposedly lead drivers to bid
up the price of gas, swallowing the tax cut.
But this is not what happened in Illinois and Indiana back in 2000. And
there are factors at work today that might provide equal or more "elasticity" to
the producers, and prevent consumers from paying the price for the tax cut.
Gasoline inventories are currently very high, and these surpluses can
absorb much of any increase in demand. (See here.). Should gasoline consumption surge still higher,
in the short run, refiners can also divert enough of the crude oil meant for
other products -- diesel or jet fuel, for example -- into gasoline to meet
demand.
On the demand side, let's face it: This is a tiny price cut. It is not
likely to spur demand much beyond the usual seasonal increase in driving. And if
oil companies do what Obama says they will do -- jack up prices to cover the tax
-- there would be no incentive at all to drive more.
The media has attacked the Clinton plan for not being supported by the
think tanks and economists. But there are a few economists out there -- such as
Bill Polley -- who point out that if short-run demand is also inelastic, it is
"not a foregone conclusion that the suppliers will get all the benefit." In
fact, Polley concludes that consumers would get a nickel a gallon or more benefit
-- not much, but better than nothing.
What about the charge that Clinton's summer tax holiday will spur
consumption, leading to sharply higher long-term demand, thus crippling our
efforts to conserve? Well, the economic literature suggests otherwise.
Basically, it is absurd to say that a summer-long price drop of this tiny
magnitude will have any long-term effect at all. A meta-study by Molly Espey of
101 different economic studies, published in Energy Journal, found that in the
short run (defined as one year or less), the average price elasticity of demand
for gasoline is only -0.26. That is, a 10 percent hike in the price of gasoline
lowers quantity demanded by 2.6 percent. As long as the price stimulus is small
and short-lived, there is little if any long-term effect. And most experts agree
that in order to actually curtail demand through taxes, it would take a much
higher tax than is politically feasible.
Not one of the three major presidential candidates is calling for a $2 or
$3 a gallon tax increase. The better long-term approach -- given the lack of
political spine by any U.S. politician on this subject -- is higher efficiency
standards, and big-time investment into transportation alternatives. Both Obama
and Clinton are pushing these.
Finally, Obama says the gas tax holiday would cost thousands of
construction jobs and lead to crumbling roadways and bridges. But if Clinton
replaces the lost revenue with a windfall profit tax on oil companies, as she
insists is necessary, then there would be no harm to our infrastructure repair
work.
Many -- including Clinton backer and economist Paul Krugman -- have
questioned whether Clinton's proposed windfall profits tax would work: "In one
pocket, out the other. So it's pointless, not evil, " says Krugman. "But it is
pointless, and disappointing."
But under Clinton's plan, if properly implemented, any additional profit
realized by an oil company by passing on the cost of the windfall profits tax to
customers would also be subject to the tax. This means a dollar passed through
to consumers to offset the tax would appear as profit ... and be taxed.
How to enforce this? Make it against the law for oil companies to pass the
price of the windfall profits tax on to consumers, and then audit the oil
companies' books. It is not a difficult accounting exercise to tax excess
profits above a certain gross percentage per barrel of oil, or gallon of gas.
Every major oil company has sophisticated profit segmentation reports that go to
the very senior management of the company. These reports identify revenues,
costs and profit at each level of the vertically integrated operation, broken
down on a per barrel basis by product type, marketing region, you name it.
The oil companies also will have a powerful inducement to avoid being
caught -- and in this kind of toxic political environment, they may actually
swallow the tax.
But it takes a little bit of courage to take them on, and a belief that we
do not always have to be victims. Obama -- where is your optimism?
-- By George Frost
If I
could have convinced more slaves that they were slaves, I could have freed
thousands more. (Harriet
Tubman)





