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KimRueben
on Fri 02 May 2008 12:04 PM EDT
While TaxVox and others have disclosed the folly of a federal tax holiday, some have suggested that temporary state gas tax relief might work better. Some New York State legislators are already pushing for such a plan. But before cash-strapped states jump on the bandwagon, they might consider how a previous experiment in Illinois and Indiana worked out. In 2000, Indiana announced that it would be suspending its 5 percent gasoline sales tax for 120 days beginning July 1. In response, Illinois also suspended its levy for six months that July.. Quaint as it seems today, the changes were spurred by a spring spike in Midwest gas prices to (gasp) $2.00 – a level drivers would now gladly embrace.
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by
Howard Gleckman
on Tue 29 Apr 2008 04:52 PM EDT
Props to Barack Obama for resisting the siren call for a summer gas tax holiday. In contrast, Hillary Clinton has clambered aboard John McCain’s free-lunch bandwagon, vowing to support the gas tax cut he first proposed a couple of weeks ago. Even worse, she’s now tied it to an energy company windfall profits tax so, as she says, oil companies would “pay their fair share to help us solve the problems at the pump.” more »
by
Howard Gleckman
on Tue 25 Mar 2008 04:01 PM EDT
Don’t expect carbon taxes to both dramatically reduce greenhouse gasses and serve as a cash cow for government. They might succeed at one or the other, but not both. That’s the argument Monica Prasad makes in a provocative article in today’s New York Times. more »
by
Howard Gleckman
on Mon 24 Dec 2007 02:16 PM EST
Congress and the President have finally left town. But they left quite a legacy. Here are our nominees for the five biggest fiscal losers of 2007.
The AMT Patch: Sure, Congress finally agreed to keep 20 million middle-class families off the AMT for one more year. But it never paid for the $50 billion temporary fix and ignored proposals to permanently resolve the mess. Just wait until next year, when they do it all again.
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by
Howard Gleckman
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 01:22 PM EST
When the Senate passed a long-awaited energy bill yesterday, I flashed back to a fascinating off-the-record chat I had back in 2004 with a top executive of a major oil company. He was in Washington to help make sure that the energy bidness got its piece of an especially hideous tax break called the Sec. 199 production deduction. more »
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