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Tuesday, December 04, 2007
David Strom :: Townhall.com Columnist
Eliminate the Federal Gas Tax
by David Strom
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The 18.4 cents a gallon Federal gas tax is perhaps the single worst influence on the development of rational transportation policies in the United States, and it should be eliminated.

For many, even those on the right, those are fighting words. Gas taxes are usually portrayed as “user fees,” and there is no question that there is a legitimate Federal interest in fostering interstate commerce and ensuring a first-rate transportation infrastructure that serves as the backbone of our national economy.

Unfortunately, in today’s political climate gas taxes serve neither as legitimate “user fees” nor do they effectively serve to improve the overall efficiency and effectiveness of the movement of goods, services, and people. In fact, they often do just the opposite.

Everybody by now is familiar with the infamous “earmarks” that plague the appropriations process in Washington. In the latest transportation bill over 6000 earmarks diverted billions of dollars away from investments in basic infrastructure to the preferred projects of powerful Congressmen.

Here in Minnesota, about 40% of the Federal transportation funding was diverted to earmarks—usually reflecting the preferences of Congressman Jim Oberstar, whose seniority on the Appropriations committee gives him inordinate power to divert resources at whim.

And what do these earmarks fund? Nature trails, bike paths, welcome centers, and other such “pork-barrel” spending. One earmark even funded a program to make the Minneapolis-St. Paul airport more bicycle friendly! Is this how Federal gas tax dollars should be used?

But earmarks are not the only or even the worst result of Federal involvement in transportation decision-making. Federal dollars also come with strings attached, which effectively force states to divert resources away from pressing transportation needs. Without huge infusions of Federal matching funds it would have been unthinkable to sink hundreds of millions of dollars into underperforming rail transit systems, for instance. Continued...

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About The Author

David Strom is the President of the Minnesota Free Market Institute. He hosts a weekly radio show on AM-1280 "The Patriot" in Minneapolis-St. Paul, available on podcast at Townhall.com.

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Taxes misused and abused...
The gasoline tax was originally put in place in 1932 under President Hoover during the depression at 1 cent per gallon on either domestic or imported gasoline. It was raised over the years and never "went away" as promised in one year. (What taxes do?)

By 1972 under the Revenue Act it was up to 4 cents; under Reagan it rose to 9 cents, with 8 cents redirected to the Highways and 1 cent to Mass Transit. President George Bush Sr. raised it to 14 cents with half to reduce the deficit and half to the Highway Trust Fund.

When Bill CLINTON came into office, he MORE than DOUBLED it to 18.4 cents where it has STAYED! He wanted to put ZERO cents to the Highway Trust Fund and all to the deficit reduction, but was overruled by the Taxpayer Relief Act which allows 4.3 cents to go to the Highway Trust Fund and the rest to deficit reduction.

It has NOTHING to do with Oil Companies or Our current President George W. Bush, who Has NOT raised it and who everyone likes to blame; it has to do with government control and spending!

NO TAX goes AWAY & thanks to CLINTON the gasoline tax DOUBLED! It has not risen since.

Ron about tax reform
Since we the people are the only ultimate source of all tax revenue, all existing taxes should be repealed and replaced with a proper single tax for each level of government - ONE TAX AND DONE. After removing federal and state at-the-pump taxes and all the other taxes, your $3.00 gallon of gas will cost $1.80. Government is the main gouger when it comes to gas prices, and all other prices too.
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