So, this writer thinks that it would be a good thing to keep gas prices at $4... and he gives his reasons. Read below and tell me what you think.
Why we need to keep gas above $4
A new gasoline tax that ensured high prices would accelerate the move toward fuel-efficient vehicles and provide enough revenue to allow a cut in corporate taxes.
On the surface, the market's behavior on certain days of June and July has been so illogical that my brain simply has refused to accept it. Double-digit intraday swings in prices of stocks without any material catalyst have become routine.
But last week's trading has finally explained what should have been clear for a while: Though current economic troubles may have started with lax credit and underwriting standards and the ensuing subprime-mortgage fiasco, they will likely continue or end based on the behavior of another, seemingly unrelated macroeconomic input: oil prices.
Forget the naked short selling hype or the problems of Fannie Mae (FNM, news, msgs) and Freddie Mac (FRE, news, msgs). These are simply headline grabbers and symptoms of the U.S. economy's problems.
The seemingly unstoppable rise of oil prices over the past several years has brought chaos and pain to so many sectors of the economy that even presumably conservative U.S. politicians have called for a gas tax "holiday" to give consumers short-term relief at the pump.
However, the solution to our economic woes lies actually in the opposite direction: making sure prices for gasoline stay high long enough. Let me explain.
An addiction that can be broken
Many economists have argued for years that even a doubling or tripling of oil prices would have little effect on demand because of that demand's inelasticity. U.S. consumers are supposedly so addicted to gas-guzzling trucks and SUVs that pretty much every politician and economist out there has ridiculed suggestions that demand could decline.
One might argue that this notion was supported by hard data. Even when oil prices doubled and tripled from their multiyear lows of the early 2000s, the growth in demand did not really slow. But contrary to the conventional beliefs, the "unthinkable" finally happened this year: Sales of cars overtook truck and SUV sales, and gasoline demand faltered.
According to the data from the Energy Information Administration, gasoline demand in the U.S. has been running consistently below last year's levels. Though it is difficult to pinpoint the exact price level that triggered this seismic change, the demand for the supposedly inelastic product started to decline somewhere around $4 a gallon.
One might say it wasn't just the price at the pump but rather combination of several economic woes that has led consumers to cut back. I agree, but only to a point. I don't think it was by accident that the sectors that have declined the most recently -- auto manufacturers, airlines, convenience stores, casinos, hotels, car rental companies, restaurants, etc. -- have one ingredient in common: They are particularly affected by high energy prices.
Talk back: Is a higher gas tax the answer?
So instead of debating the causes of today's oil prices -- peak oil supply, demand in China or whatever -- we should thank Wall Street and Ben Bernanke and company at the Federal Reserve for finally showing us how this oil dilemma could be solved.
I think it could be accomplished only by making sure the prices for the most widely used petroleum product, gasoline, never again decline below the level that seems to have triggered change, somewhere around $4 a gallon. Raising fuel taxes would likely make things better, not worse. Before sending me an "I hate taxes" e-mail, consider instead sending a letter to your politician asking him or her to raise taxes.
Take a look at the facts: Damage to the most energy-sensitive sectors has been done already, and Americans are already paying a hidden oil tax. But instead sending of our money to Washington, we are now sending it to the other governments around the world, and it's not a small bill. In 2007, the U.S. petroleum import bill came to an astounding $331 billion. In the first five months of 2008, the total was $191 billion.
The upside of a higher gas tax
Yes, even though I believe government intervention is usually a bad thing, establishing a variable gasoline tax that ensured gasoline never declined below $4 a gallon could alter the dynamics of the global economy and help the U.S. maintain its economic leadership status for years to come.
Economist Gregory Mankiw has estimated a $1 tax increase on gasoline could raise $100 billion in revenue that could (and should) be used to reduce the ridiculously high U.S. corporate tax rate. That, in turn, could lead to more jobs and better pay in virtually all domestic industries.
A variable tax on gasoline would accomplish another important objective: Knowing for certain that gas prices would never drop back to $2 a gallon, consumers and manufacturers would rapidly accelerate the shift to more-fuel-efficient vehicles. This would reduce long-term gasoline-demand expectations and could lead to lower short-term energy prices for the struggling energy-sensitive sectors of the U.S. economy.
During this election year, I don't expect any politicians will have enough courage to propose raising gas taxes. But maybe if plenty of us ask, they'll at least listen.
For now, the direction of the U.S. stock market and the economy will likely be determined by the direction oil prices are heading. And given how painful last week's losses must have been to the seemingly bulletproof Wall Street buy-energy, short-financials strategy, one would expect that Goldman Sachs (GS, news, msgs) and company are now busy preparing another "Oil prices to hit $200 by Labor Day" report and writing big donation checks to the powerful ethanol and environmental lobbies that might just lead to another price spike.
Here is a link to the full article: http://articles.moneycentral.msn.com/Investing/StrategyLab/Rnd17/P2/TheAmateurJournal20080722.aspx



3 comments:
Here's my thought on the subject. If the gas tax was used to lower corporate taxes and boost job growth, then wouldn't spending $4 a gallon on gas lose the pain and impact it is having right now? If that pain was reduced, then demand would go back to what it was pre oil crisis. So the addiction to oil would continue until things got really bad. I say we get all the experts together, see how much oil we have in the U.S. cut off our reliance on middle east oil, and make a plan for when our own oil supplies cannot support our needs. Then when the oil is gone here, we will be ready with our solar cars and battery operated scooters.
I agree Paul. So how do we get all the experts together... and how do we get all the "experts" to agree?
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