Tsukasa Buddha
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- Sep 10, 2006
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With just days before the next set of Democratic primaries, the idea of a summer "gas tax holiday" is working its way to the economic forefront, and become a rare flashpoint of policy disagreement between Sens. Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama.
Clinton has suggested suspending the 18.4 cent-per-gallon tax on gasoline, while Obama has attacked the idea as political pandering. But the merits of the idea haven't received much evaluation on the stump.
To fund her plan, Clinton has suggested taxing oil companies (Sen. John McCain has also advocated a suspension of the gas tax, but without the same funding mechanism).
Linky.
I think it sounds kinda gimmicky.
And then there are the economists who say that it would actually raise gas prices... yeah, I suck at economics, so I don't know if that's true.
Paul Krugman, a Hillary supporter, said:
Why doesn't cutting the gas tax this summer make sense? It's Econ 101 tax incidence theory: if the supply of a good is more or less unresponsive to the price, the price to consumers will always rise until the quantity demanded falls to match the quantity supplied. Cut taxes, and all that happens is that the pretax price rises by the same amount. The McCain gas tax plan is a giveaway to oil companies, disguised as a gift to consumers.
Is the supply of gasoline really fixed? For this coming summer, it is. Refineries normally run flat out in the summer, the season of peak driving. Any elasticity in the supply comes earlier in the year, when refiners decide how much to put in inventories. The McCain/Clinton gas tax proposal comes too late for that. So it's Econ 101: the tax cut really goes to the oil companies.
The Clinton twist is that she proposes paying for the revenue loss with an excess profits tax on oil companies. In one pocket, out the other. So it's pointless, not evil. But it is pointless, and disappointing.
Again, I don't know much about economics, but I think this whole "Let's take their outrageous profits!" populist theme is a little silly.
I also think it is kinda ridiculous that they are claiming that they are going to help stop global warming and at the same time they are encouraging gas use. If they want to tax oil profits, use it to fund alternative energy.