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201 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2006)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0198 and id is 1 raw text is: INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH ON THE ECONOMICS OF TAXATION
IRET is a non-profit 501 (c)(3) economic policy research and educational organization devoted to informing
the public about policies that will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

April 6, 2006

Advisory No. 201

HOW TO NOT ATTAIN ENERGY SECURITY

A bill of attainder is a legislative act that
singles out an individual or group for punishment for
some purported crime without a trial.
The Constitution of the United States, Article 1,
Section 9, paragraph 3, declares: No Bill of
Attainder or ex post facto Law shall be passed.
The use of bills of attainder by the monarchies
of Europe to punish their opponents so offended the
Founding Fathers that they wrote a prohibition
against such despotic practices into the Constitution.
That, of course, has never been the end of the
matter.
In November, 2005, the CEO's of the five
largest oil companies selling fuel in the United States
appeared before a joint hearing of the Senate Energy
and Natural Resources Committee and the Senate
Committee    on   Commerce,    Science,   and
Transportation on the rise in fuel prices following
Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.   The witnesses'
testimony and their responses to questions could
have come directly out of any principles of
economics textbook, pointing out that a reduction in
supply must cause an increase in price of any
commodity if the market is to work to allocate the
remaining product in an efficient manner.
The witnesses, however, were not cast in the
role of teachers speaking to interested students, nor
was the setting that of a classroom. Rather, it more
closely resembled a courtroom, with some of the
Senators accusing the witnesses of economic crimes
or, at least, bad behavior. Executives of the same
companies were called back to testify before the

Senate Judiciary Committee in March, 2006, along
with the head of a major refining company. They
were again subjected to a series of questions that
were more in the nature of accusations than a search
for information. Another witness, an independent
economist, largely  supported  the  companies'
contention that the price increases were related to the
world price of oil and gas, not to evil-doings in the
executive suites.
Although the hearings were not real trials, there
was a real verdict. The witnesses were found guilty
of presenting an economic explanation of their
actions instead of offering a full confession of their
political crimes and misdemeanors. There was also
a real sentence in the form of three peculiar tax
provisions in the Senate version of the Tax
Reconciliation bill which singled out the group of
five integrated oil companies represented at the
hearings.
These punitive provisions involve, for the five
big firms only, an arbitrary change in the accounting
for crude oil and refined fuels inventories that would
inflate taxable income, and an unfavorable alteration
in the write-off periods of certain exploration and
development costs. For the three firms that are
headquartered in the United States, a third provision
would curtail access to the foreign tax credit for
taxes paid abroad by means of redefining what sort
of foreign payments qualify as taxes for the purpose
of the credit. (The other two firms are subsidiaries
of foreign companies, and would not feel this
provision.)  Other U.S. energy sector businesses
would not be affected by these measures, even
though the companies may also have experienced

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