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posted by martyb on Thursday November 13 2014, @10:45PM   Printer-friendly
from the pump-it-up dept.

Pat Garofalo writes in an op-ed in US News & World Report that with the recent drop in oil prices, there's something policymakers can do that will offset at least some of the negative effects of the currently low prices, while also removing a constant thorn in the side of American transportation and infrastructure policy: Raise the gas tax. The current 18.4 cent per gallon [federal] gas tax has not been raised since 1993, making it about 11 cents per gallon today, in constant dollars. Plus, as fuel efficiency has gotten better and Americans have started driving less, the tax has naturally raised less revenue anyway. And that's a problem because the tax fills the Highway Trust Fund, which is, not to put too fine a point on it, broke so that in recent years Congress has had to patch it time and time again to fill the gap. According to the Tax Policy Center's Howard Gleckman, if Congress doesn't make a move, "it will fumble one of those rare opportunities when the economic and policy stars align almost perfectly." The increase can be phased in slowly, a few cents per month, perhaps, so that the price of gas doesn't jump overnight. When prices eventually do creep back up thanks to economic factors, hopefully the tax will hardly be noticed.

Consumers are already starting to buy the sort of gas-guzzling vehicles, including Hummers, that had been going out of style as gas prices rose; that's bad for both the environment and consumers, because gas prices are inevitably going to increase again. According to data from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, taxes last year, even before the current drop in prices, made up 12 percent of the cost of a gallon of gasoline, down from 28 percent in 2000. And compared to other developed countries, US gas taxes are pretty much a joke. While we're at it, an even better idea, as a recent report from the Urban Institute makes clear, would be indexing the gas tax to inflation (pdf), so this problem doesn't consistently arise. "The status quo simply isn't sustainable, from an infrastructure or environmental perspective," concludes Garofalo. "So raise the gas tax now; someday down the line, it will look like a brilliant move."

 
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  • (Score: 2) by morgauxo on Friday November 14 2014, @05:11AM

    by morgauxo (2082) on Friday November 14 2014, @05:11AM (#115801)

    As it is the same roads get torn up and re-paved year after year needed or not while other roads continue to fall apart with no repairs in site. Meanwhile, every inch of road that MIGHT get worked on in a summer gets barelled off causing traffic problems at the begining of the construction season even if the spots which are last on the list to actually get worked on. Construction companies then bill the states for the whole time!

    Taking money from people that earn it and throwing it into that system should be a crime. I see no reason to raise taxes for road construction until a whole lot of corrupt politicians and contractors have been removed from their positions.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 14 2014, @05:16AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 14 2014, @05:16AM (#115804)

    > As it is the same roads get torn up and re-paved year after year needed or not

    Yes, lets just make up random facts to justify our biases.
    Clearly all the road repairs that are done are done on roads that do not need it.
    Sometimes what you write says everything about you and nothing about what the topic at hand.