Washington County Enterprise-Leader

Highway Money Runs Out Of Gas

LAWMAKERS NEED TO STOP SEEKING EASY WAY OUT

- Ryan Alexander RYAN ALEXANDER IS PRESIDENT OF TAXPAYERS FOR COMMON SENSE. DISTRIBUTE­D VIA OTHERWORDS.

Lawmakers writing the transporta­tion spending bill have a problem. Actually they have 89 billion problems, because that’s how many dollars they are short between what they want to spend over the next six years and the revenue bean counters expect.

Considerin­g the contortion­s Congress has gone through when it came to finding offsets for more spending in recent years, it’s in a fiscal pickle.

You know the saying: When the going gets tough, the tough get going? The question here is where are lawmakers going? Are they going to make tough decisions and find the transporta­tion-related revenue for their transporta­tion-spending appetite? Or are they going to try to find an easy route through starving other accounts, paper gimmicks, or raiding the Treasury’s refrigerat­or?

Our transporta­tion system relies on user fees, most notably the gas tax. The basic idea being that transporta­tion infrastruc­ture should be paid for by those using it and be self-sustaining. Thus, you pay for the roads when you fill-up your F-150, not when you fill out your Form 1040. But in recent years the math hasn’t worked. We’ve run out of money.

Not surprising­ly, lawmakers are trying to find an easy way out. After raiding the Treasury for an additional $50 billion since 2008, they are now sinking to new lows by proposing ridiculous offsets.

House Republican­s have suggested using savings from getting rid of Saturday mail delivery as an offset.

Well, you could say that having fewer mail vehicles on the road reduces impact, but that’s pretty much the inverse of a user fee like the gas tax.

Senate Finance Committee Chair Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) has suggested using 10 years of mostly gimmicky offsets (although it does call for an increase in the Heavy Vehicles Use Tax, which hasn’t changed in 30 years) to generate $9 billion in revenue to keep the Highway Trust Fund afloat through the end of 2014.

Not to be outdone, some Senators are floating the idea of using multinatio­nal corporatio­ns’ profits that are parked overseas as an offset. There is an estimated $1.95 trillion in profits being kept out of the U.S. to avoid the official 35 percent corporate tax rate.

The idea is to let compa- nies bring these profits back stateside but taxed at a rate of five percent or so. And voila. There’s $98 billion in revenue to replenish the trust fund for years.

That seems rather untenable, given that the Joint Committee on Taxation estimates that this kind of tax holiday would really only bring in $19.6 billion for two years before becoming a revenue loser.

There are several problems with these staggering­ly bad ideas. One, they don’t fix any of the fundamenta­l problems with the trust fund revenue shortfalls compared to lawmakers spending desires. Two, revenue generated from a tax holiday — if such a scam was to be perpetrate­d on taxpayers — should go to the Treasury, not some dedicated purpose. We still have a half–trillion-dollar deficit and a $17.5 trillion debt, after all.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States