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241 IRET Congressional Advisory 1 (2008)

handle is hein.taxfoundation/iretcgadv0238 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 thait will promote growth and efficient operation of the market economy.

June 10, 2008

Advisory No. 241

ENERGY PRICE BILL - S. 3044 - UP FOR CONSIDERATION

The  Senate is again   considering  energy
legislation that failed to pass last year. The bill
(S. 3044 - the Energy Price Bill) would raise $17
billion in revenue by denying the use of existing tax
provisions to the largest energy companies (those
that produce over 500,000 barrels of crude oil a
day), and would impose a 25% windfall profits tax
on major integrated oil companies and use the tax
proceeds to fund research into alternative fuels. The
tax revenue would be directed to a trust fund to
support research into alternative fuels. The bill
contains an anti-price gauging provision.
The tax provisions would reduce energy
production by U.S. based companies and raise fuel
prices. They would make the United States even
more dependent on foreign oil. They would make it
harder for U.S. companies to obtain foreign leases or
to participate in consortia to develop and market
foreign-source energy, leaving more of those
activities for foreign private and state-owned
companies. That would reduce the influence of U.S.
firms and the U.S. government over global energy
production and marketing, which would impede U.S.
energy security, if in fact that concept has any
meaning to begin with. The anti-price gouging
provision is so vague as to be unenforceable, and
would do more harm than good if any attempt were
made to make it work.
Windfall profits tax.
Been there, done that, regretted it mightily. The
windfall profits tax would discourage production by
U.S. companies, especially here at home, and would
raise prices of gasoline and other fuels. The tax

would make us even more dependent of foreign oil,
just as it did in the 1970s and early 1980s. The
energy industry has highly cyclical profits. Over
time, these profits are very much in line with those
of most other industries. Capping the industry's
profits at the  peaks would    reduce  average
profitability and reduce investment in the sector,
driving capital into other industries or offshore. The
U.S. based companies would find it harder to
compete with foreign rivals for supplies and reserves
elsewhere in the world.
Denying standard tax treatment to large oil
companies - $17 billion over ten years.
Denial of the manufacturing deduction (Section
199) to certain producers of domestic energy. The
bill would disallow the manufacturing deduction for
all domestic producers of oil, gas, and derived
primary products for the major U.S. based integrated
oil companies (but not for their foreign-owned
competitors in the U.S. market). Section 199 allows
a 9% deduction from income from manufacturing
and certain food and natural resource processing
activities. It effectively cuts the corporate tax rate
from 35% to 31.85%, with a similar reduction in
non-corporate tax rates. It replaced the DISC, FISC,
and ETI credits to promote U.S. exports that were
ruled illegal by the WTO. It would make more
sense to reduce corporate and small business tax
rates across the board, for manufacturing, mining,
fanning, and services.  Nonetheless, if a fairly
general reduction for manufacturing and processing
industries is on the books, there is no legitimate
reason to deny it to the energy sector. It would
reduce energy output.

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