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![]() "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message link.net... "Tom Sixkiller" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message link.net... "Tom Sixkiller" wrote in message ... "Mike Rapoport" wrote in message ink.net... Actually ending our dependence on foriegn oil would be pretty easy but people don't want to do it. In round figures: We import about a third of our Petroleum Two thirds of petroleum is used for transportation It is possible to cut transportation use in half through a combination of fuel efficiency and more efficient trip planning. The reason we don't is that the costs are horrendous. As for trip planning and fuel efficiency, I'd like to see how Soccer Mom's® driving SUV's and mini-vans are going to improve their trip planning. My wife goes to the grocery store (12 miles each way) almost everyday to get something that she forgot the previous day, so she could certainly improve her trip planning. As a result of cheap gasoline, people are living great distances from their workplace with commutes of over an hour being common in many parts of the country. If gasoline was $5/gallon you would see commute distances shorten, more telecommuting, smaller vehicles, better trip planning. The economic costs of doing all this are tiny and probably there is actually a benefit. If there was simply a $4 tax on gasoline and an equivenenat tax credit (transferable) for income taxes, there would be no net economic cost and a huge incentive to use energy more efficiently. There would be casualties in businesses catering to people traveling by auto but that is about it. So, because people don't do what YOU want, you feel it's okay/imperative to FORCE them to abide by your whims? There's a name for that. You seem to miss the point. If you are taxed for something and given a credit equal to the amount of the tax, nobody is *forced* to do anything. Rather it is an opportunity to be better off by using less of the taxed commodity. So...if the credit is equal to the tax, it's then a "wash" and the only increase will be in the bureaucracy that tracks both sides. I'll bet you one thing; the tax will go in place, but the credit won't, or it will sunset (but not the tax), Remember that "prices are measures" . When you try to manipulate them, up or down, you're interfering with a market...that is, people making free choices. I would think that with the track record that government and the bureaucracy has garnered over the past 100+ years, that no one in their right mind would concoct such manipulative schemes. "The road to hell is paved with good intentions". |
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