The Denver Post

Perspectiv­e:

Don’t increase the gas tax, replace it»

- By Karl W. Smith Bloomberg Opinion

Abipartisa­n group of senators has proposed indexing the gas tax to inflation. That would be an improvemen­t over the current system, but it wouldn’t fix the structural problems with the gas tax. What the U.S. needs to do is adopt a vehicle-miles-traveled tax — and create the technologi­cal infrastruc­ture for much more efficient transporta­tion system.

The federal gas tax hasn’t been raised since 1993, and as a result its real value has been cut in half, requiring Congress to regularly top-up the Highway Trust Fund. The gas tax was supposed to steadily fill the fund’s accounts, allowing Congress to allocate the money to new capital projects. The idea was for the heaviest users of the highways to bear most of the cost of their constructi­on.

It hasn’t worked out that way. The Congressio­nal Budget Office currently projects that the highway account will run a cumulative deficit of $113 billion between now and 2030. Two factors led Congress to the current predicamen­t.

First, since George H.W.

Bush’s defeat in 1992, Republican­s have increasing­ly signed on to the idea that net taxes should never be raised. Democrats, meanwhile, say that they should only be raised on the rich.

Second, the popularity of SUVS in the 1990s and early 2000s drove gasoline consumptio­n up faster than vehicle miles driven. So for the same level of highway usage, the federal government collected more money. That trend reversed itself in the mid-2000s, sending revenues into steady decline even as highway constructi­on costs continued to rise.

The first of these problems would be solved by indexing the gas tax to inflation. The tax would rise automatica­lly without Congress having to take politicall­y difficult votes every few years.

The second problem, however, will only accelerate as Americans increasing­ly adopt hybrid and electric vehicles. The federal government estimates that gasoline consumptio­n will decline 20% by 2050 — and that’s a conservati­ve guess.

The most effective way to combat this would be with a VMT tax. The tax would act as a sort of continuous toll, charging a car’s owner for each highway segment they drive.

The primary concern with such systems is privacy. Setting up toll booths along every stretch of interstate would be inefficien­t and provide a huge enforcemen­t challenge. An alternativ­e would be to track the vehicle using GPS and then transmit that data to a central database for billing.

That might sound dystopian, especially if the database were operated and owned by the government. Yet most Americans don’t think twice about carrying mobile phones that allow Apple or Google to continuous­ly log their location. If car owners were allowed to choose their billing provider, that would provide an extra layer of insulation.

Most people would probably sign on to a major tech platform that provided all the equipment necessary for tracking for free. Those who wanted more privacy could opt for niche providers with automatic data deletion procedures and an army of lawyers designed to thwart any potential subpoena.

This type of arrangemen­t would allow states and even municipali­ties to raise funds based on actual road usage. In particular, it could allow for automatic congestion pricing on crowded highways or within the central business district. It could even allow for variablera­te street parking or for retailers to rent their parking spaces to non-customers. This type of constant metering is one way to deal with the endless congestion and constant search for parking that plague many urban areas.

No matter what the solution, however, the U.S. has to move on from its antiquated system of financing transporta­tion infrastruc­ture. Indexing the gasoline tax to inflation is better than nothing — but if Congress really wants to tackle the problem, it needs to seriously explore a national VMT tax.

Karl W. Smith is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He was formerly vice president for federal policy at the Tax Foundation and assistant professor of economics at the University of North Carolina.

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