Daily Kos

The Worst Aspect Of The Gas Tax Holiday

Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:05:42 PM PDT

Ever since McCain and Clinton proposed and Obama opposed a Gas Tax Holiday, a proposal to repeal the 18.4 cent Federal tax on gasoline for the summer months, there has been near universal condemnation of the idea from a policy standpoint. There is another aspect though that is arguably worse. If enacted, the "holiday" would become a political football in the general election and runs the risk of becoming a permanent vacation.

Before getting into that, here is a little discussion of the policy debate. It can be skipped by those who have been following this issue closely..

Policy Considerations

The holiday is being proposed to supposedly give consumers a little relief from high gas prices that are reaching $4.00 per gallon, driven up largely by crude oil prices of $120 per barrel. The proposal has been widely panned. It is viewed as political pandering that will provide few if any benefits to consumers and create myriad other problems.

Consumers may not benefit since there is no assurance that some or all of the tax reduction will be reflected in price reductions at the pump. It is equally likely that prices will remain at or near where they are today, and that elimination of the tax will have the effect of further lining the already bloated pockets of the oil industry.

Even if all of the tax relief was passed on to consumers the benefit would be very small, estimated between $30 and $70 per family. Those who argue that every little bit helps relieve the economic suffering of consumers and helps to spur the economy, lose sight of the fact that Congress already enacted a stimulus program providing most individuals and families between $300 and $1800 for the specific purpose of achieving those same two objectives.

Besides providing limited benefit consumers, opponents point out that the holiday will hurt the economy by increasing the budget deficit, enlarging the national debt, and/or reducing the funding available to rebuild our crumbling roads and bridges. On the fiscal issues, when we are running a deficit and have an outstanding debt, there are NO tax cuts. There are only deferred taxes that are imposed on our children and grandchildren. Regarding our infrastructure, now is the time to be spending more not less to rebuild our transportation infrastructure. Not only will it put people to work in this country but it will improve our productivity and spur future economic growth.

(Yes, Clinton couples her proposal with a windfall profits tax on oil companies. That is an excellent idea that should be enacted but it doesn't really address the concerns about the tax holiday.)

Additionally, many argue that in a time of rising oil imports and increasing concern about environmental impacts, we should not be encouraging the consumption of gasoline. While high prices hurt, they may be the most effective way to reduce consumption and spur interest in high mileage and alternative fuel automobiles.

All of this has been discussed at length and forms the bases for the widespread opposition to the proposal among those who have studied it. But beyond these policy considerations there are big political downsides to the proposal.

Political Considerations, Now and Later

Clinton is championing the holiday because she thinks it will get her votes in the remaining primaries. Whether she is right remains to be seen. McCain apparently thinks it will burnish his image as a candidate with compassion for the economic straits of average voters that could help him in the general election. However, If supporting the holiday has political benefit today, that benefit will only translate to votes in the fall under one circumstance.

First, if the holiday is not enacted now, the question of whether or not a candidate supported it in the spring will have no impact on the general election campaigns. There will be no impact because the American people will have gone on with their lives and be looking to the future. They will not care about something that did not happen in the Spring and would be over with by then anyway. People will be dealing with the problems they are facing in the fall and judging candidates accordingly. There is one thing, though, that could change that calculus. A candidate could revive the idea and propose a tax holiday in the fall. That leads to the real political problem with the holiday.

If, God forbid, the tax holiday is enacted now, it will not die. As summer wanes there will be proposals to extend it for a period of months or maybe indefinitely. McCain will argue for the extension because he will consider the failure to do so as imposing a tax increase on consumers. We know that is how Republicans always package these things. They are doing it with the 2001 and 2003 Bush temporary tax cuts that are due to expire, and will certainly do the same with the gas tax. We will be mere months away from the general election and the ads will be a panderer's delight. If the Democratic candidate does not support a continuation of the holiday, that candidate will be charged mercilessly with "wanting to raise your taxes." No matter how bogus the policy arguments are, no candidate wants to subject themselves to that kind of attack.

Trying to rebut these types of attacks is tough enough when you are only facing the typical  type of bogus charge that the Republicans always gin up against Democrats. This time, it will be much worse. In the fall voters will have become used to the world as it exists without the tax. They won't know for sure whether the tax cut reduced their gas bills, but the Republicans will repeatedly claim that it saved them tons of money. Voters won't see the impact of the tax cut on our deteriorating infrastructure and the slow cancer of the national debt. They will, however, see the prospect of the price of gas they pay at the pump increasing by 18.4 cents and will consider that when they cast their ballots. I fear that many will not look kindly on any candidate who supported that idea.

This tax holiday must not be enacted. It is terrible public policy. Moreover, passage of the holiday now could result in an effort to enact a permanent vacation in the fall. Such an effort could be a nightmare for our candidate in the general election.

Tags: gas tax holiday, Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, John McCain, George W. Bush, 2008 (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 40 comments

    •  One other political problem (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      PsychoSavannah, Gary Norton
      If it's enacted and in the fall the oil companies announce new record profits. Anyone who supported it would be destroyed. Bye bye, John W. McBush!

      We're retiring Steve LaTourette (R-Family Values for You But Not for Me) and sending Judge Bill O'Neill to Congress from Ohio-14: http://www.oneill08.com/

      by anastasia p on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:40:36 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  Seattle Times just published my letter today (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Gary Norton

      Gas masks
      The hidden realities

      The "gas-tax holiday" idea, as proposed by Sens. John McCain and Hillary Clinton, wouldn't likely lower gas prices — it's more likely gas prices would just go up, to make up the difference ["McCain calls for summer-long suspension of gas tax," News, April 16].

      Gas prices are based on what the market will bear, and unless people react to higher gas prices by buying less gas, prices will continue to rise, in line with what people will pay.

      The gas tax is a flat rate, not a percentage. Gas prices have already risen much more over the past few months than any difference a gas-tax holiday would make. It just doesn't add up.

      The gas-tax holiday idea puts 300,000 road, highway, bridge, infrastructure and other related jobs at risk. If a gas-tax holiday measure were passed in Congress, but Hillary's "windfall profits" tax were held up in Congress or vetoed by the Bush administration (highly likely, given past actions), money badly needed for road maintenance, infrastructure, bridges and construction, which the gas tax is earmarked for, are at risk.

      Does it really help the economy to put 300,000 such jobs at risk for a pandering, $25-a-person-over-the-course-of-the-summer, symbolic drop in the proverbial bucket?

      The gas-tax holiday plays political games at a time when we have bridges collapsing and killing people. Are our memories so short-term now that we've already forgotten last year's headlines, and the survey showing how many of our bridges nationwide are at high risk for similar failures?

      — Chris R, Seattle

  •  Why I want gas prices to rise (7+ / 0-)

    John W. McCain, Bush's third term.

    by aaraujo on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:10:11 PM PDT

  •  Internal polling from a NM congressional (2+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    figurefive, berkeleybarb

    race asked me to say which ONE issue was most important to me in my upcoming primary vote for NM-03.

    1. gas prices
    1. a "reasonable" end to the war in Iraq
    1. more jobs
    1. health care
    1. education ... or something else blandly desirable. I forget.

    Well, I said the war, of course, though I resent this type of question that throws a million critical things aside.

    I wonder HOW MANY SAID GAS PRICES?  

    "The extinction of the human race will come from its inability to EMOTIONALLY comprehend the exponential function." -- Edward Teller

    by lgmcp on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:10:37 PM PDT

  •  Why is Clinton's idea of windfall profits (6+ / 0-)

    Replacing the gas tax a "good idea?"

    Don't you understand that the gas giants will simply raise the price of gas at the pump the measure of the "windfall profit?"

    And, BTW, how are you going to get windfall profits legislation passed before June?

    Clinton's idea, as usual, is completely flawed.

    To a Democrat, "democracy" means "free elections." To a Republican, "free markets."

    by XOVER on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:10:44 PM PDT

  •  What's going to happen when the holiday is over? (9+ / 0-)

    The GOP is going to call the restoration of the tax "The Biggest Tax Increase in the History of the World" and use it against Democrats in the General Election.

    "Only the most deluded of us could doubt the necessity of this war." John McCain at the RNC, August 31, 2004

    by Pangloss on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:16:59 PM PDT

  •  What did you do with your 1st tax rebate check? (0+ / 0-)

    What are you going to do with your economic stimulus check?  Give them both back under the guise of "its bad policy"?

    Of course, you're not.  You going to spend them, just like your going to spend the gas holiday tax relief.  

    Pls lecture me again.

    Whenever you find yourself on the side of the majority, it is time to pause and reflect -- Mark Twain.

    by dcrolg on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:22:03 PM PDT

    •  Are you making a point relating (5+ / 0-)

      to the subject of this post?

    •  I don't understand (3+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Gary Norton, Inland, rmoore

      Spend it or not, it's bad policy

      It turns out that Bush IS a uniter... he united the good half of the country virulently against him.

      by fizziks on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:36:09 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  N.B., the usual republican reaction: (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Gary Norton

        "If you think that a tax cut is a bad idea, they you give yours back and shut up about mine".  HRC 08 has validated so many republican values and slogans in the last couple of weeks, she might as well stamp Reagan Democrat on her forehead.

        "For a man who will turn 72 this month, he's a surprisingly immature politician--erratic, impulsive and subject to peer pressure"-Newsweek.

        by Inland on Tue May 06, 2008 at 01:11:49 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  gotcha (0+ / 0-)

          I didn't know what to make sense of that post, but you are right, it was some standard anti-tax BS.  I am guessing that this person who doesn't want to pay the gas tax still wants the roads to somehow magically still be built.

          This is the friggin truth though:

          HRC 08 has validated so many republican values and slogans in the last couple of weeks, she might as well stamp Reagan Democrat on her forehead.

          She's pathetic.

          It turns out that Bush IS a uniter... he united the good half of the country virulently against him.

          by fizziks on Tue May 06, 2008 at 01:17:02 PM PDT

          [ Parent ]

  •  In my view (6+ / 0-)

    The worst part of it is that it is not a holiday at all for someone like me who doesn't buy gas at all. I should get a friggin' tax holiday for not contributing to the demand that is driving the prices up in the first place. So should everyone else who uses alternative transportation.

    One failure after another and the final result is anarchy. -edscan

    by BoiseBlue on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:27:46 PM PDT

    •  hey that's a great point (5+ / 0-)

      A gas tax 'holiday' would be yet another example of the government subsidizing something in the wrong direction.  In this case, using tax policy to encourage, rather than discourage, fossil fuel consumption.

      It turns out that Bush IS a uniter... he united the good half of the country virulently against him.

      by fizziks on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:39:16 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  No, you can't apply logical thought here... (3+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      dwcal, Gary Norton, BoiseBlue

      What the heck were you thinking, coming up with a totally rational point here? That's not what the 'holiday' is about!

      •  It was a lesson learned - applied slooowly! (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Gary Norton

        Then: I remember a former boss trying to make a point. Sitting across the desk from me, he placed a pencil between us and told me "Try to pick up that pencil". I immediately picked it up and smirked at him with great satisfaction, only to hear his reply: "You picked it up.. I only told you TRY!"...

        Now: I'm not looking to fix the gas/oil price gouging - I'm only looking to make it APPEAR that I care!

    •  And it's more of a holiday for rich, careless (2+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      Gary Norton, BoiseBlue

      The rich guy, or the guy who was dumb enough to buy a Hummer, does better than both of us.  But you won't get a tax holiday on food.

      "For a man who will turn 72 this month, he's a surprisingly immature politician--erratic, impulsive and subject to peer pressure"-Newsweek.

      by Inland on Tue May 06, 2008 at 01:13:17 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

      •  And *that* is the holiday I need (2+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Gary Norton, Inland

        I just dropped almost $200 at the grocery store to feed two adults for a week. Soon, I won't be able to afford healthy food at all, and it will be mac and cheese time.

        But as long as everyone is comfy in their SUVs, I guess I can't complain.

        One failure after another and the final result is anarchy. -edscan

        by BoiseBlue on Tue May 06, 2008 at 01:17:51 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

    •  Compassion (0+ / 0-)

      What happened to your compassion for the poor mother that has to drop her kids off at day care and then drive to her job?  Because there's no RT or she has weird hours or whatever.  Don't give a crap about her, huh?

      •  Nope, not at all (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Gary Norton

        That's just silly. Of course I have compassion for these people. But these are not the people who will be helped by the gas tax holiday, not one bit.

        I understand that there are a lot of people who can't use alternative transportation, but there are far more who can and don't.

        If you can point to any evidence whatsoever that that poor mother is going to be helped in any substantial way whatsoever by this gas tax holiday, please let me see it.

        One failure after another and the final result is anarchy. -edscan

        by BoiseBlue on Tue May 06, 2008 at 02:45:31 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

        •  Missed the point.... (0+ / 0-)

          Your statement was

          I should get a friggin' tax holiday for not contributing to the demand

          My point is that some people can't as easily "not contribute".  Buy why should you get a break and not her?

  •  Once again we are seeing a bribe (5+ / 0-)

    this bribe is for votes, they usually are-If you vote for me I will cut your taxes.

    But what many fail to see is that this bribe is rewarding those who drive long distances in big, gas-sucking SUV's.  Harold Ford mentioned last night on tweety that some in Indiana and N.C fill up a 20 gallon tank twice a week.  Repeat this for clarity-20 gallon tank twice a week=40 gallons of gasoline a week?  That is alot of gas, roughly 4 times the amount I use in a week.  And this is the person who will most benefit from this bribe.

    So we are rewarding those who consume gasoline more than those who ration their gasoline consumption.  And it is in par with my sig line which chimp uttered at a press conference.  2 candidates are following BushCo. doctorine, the other candidate is telling the truth.

    "We need an energy bill that encourages consumption." --Trenton, N.J., Sept. 23, 2002-GWB

    by meatwad420 on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:35:02 PM PDT

  •  Not to mention the economics ... (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    JBL55

    Whenever I hear the gas tax holiday discussed no one ever mentions the micro-economics involved.

    Anyone who says suspending the tax will translate into a price drop of $0.184/gallon is clueless.

    The same way a tax increase gets partially passed on to the consumer and partially absorbed by the supplier based on supply and demand curves associated with the new price that results from the tax, so will a tax holiday be split between them.  Again, the actual split will depend on the supply and demand.

    The trouble is lowering the tax will increase demand which will in turn bring the price back up.  Thus, I'm willing to bet the true savings to consumers will ultimately be right around nil.

    To hell with Clinton and McCain and this obscene election cycle pandering.

    "nothing" the unjust man complained "is just" / ("or un-" the just rejoined) -ee cummings

    by figurefive on Tue May 06, 2008 at 12:37:03 PM PDT

    •  Agree. Thought (1+ / 0-)

      Recommended by:
      figurefive

      I addressed it here

      Consumers may not benefit since there is no assurance that some or all of the tax reduction will be reflected in price reductions at the pump. It is equally likely that prices will remain at or near where they are today, and that elimination of the tax will have the effect of further lining the already bloated pockets of the oil industry.

      but you said it better.

      •  My own lack of clarity ... (1+ / 0-)

        Recommended by:
        Gary Norton

        Never meant to sound like I was suggesting you believe we'll see the 18.4 cents at the pump.

        You definitely addressed that aspect.  I should have directed my complaint at the media's coverage.  Like most stories they are dumbing this down, or at least avoiding the boring, technical aspects.

        Just once I want to hear somone on a newscast or talkshow point out the link between supply and demand that would be at play were this enacted.

        "nothing" the unjust man complained "is just" / ("or un-" the just rejoined) -ee cummings

        by figurefive on Tue May 06, 2008 at 02:44:44 PM PDT

        [ Parent ]

  •  The Unforgivable Sin, In My Opinion, (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    PsychoSavannah, Inland, JBL55

    Is that this whole tax holiday canard is simply a continuation of the same hackneyed politics of the past twenty years which has driven us to the point of bankruptcy, oligarchy, imperialism and decline.  Rather than lead, our politicians have manipulated an electorate increasingly acclimated to half-measures by offering the carrots of quick and stop-gap fixes to profound and endemic problems.  We have deferred the questions of national health insurance, social security, educational reform, climate change policy, energy independence and reinvestment in  crumbling infrastructure.  In place of addressing these fundamental issues, we have been offered blanket and irresponsible tax cuts, token tax rebates and meaningless tax holidays.

    The working people in this country have fallen into "survivor mode", where many argue for a quick fix to get through the Summer, heedless of the long-term consequences for themselves and others.  By anyone's standards, such an attitude amongst the men and women who maintain the engine of our productivity is nothing short of a tacit admission of despair; things probably aren't going to get better, so get us through tomorrow.

    It's too sad to contemplate.

    And there is only answer: LEADERSHIP!

    The answers to our problems require will and sacrifice and courage and planning; otherwise, indeed, our cause is hopeless.

    So, if you really want to admit that there's no use. take your $30 and drive your SUV right out in the nearest river. It won't matter anyway.

  •  Next up (1+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    Gary Norton

    Parking meter holiday.

    This is a test of the Emergency Free Speech System.
    This is only a test.
    If this had been an actual emergency, I'd already be locked up.

    by ben masel on Tue May 06, 2008 at 01:14:20 PM PDT

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