Capital Commerce

Obama's $646 Billion Cap-And-Trade Green Tax

By James Pethokoukis

Posted: February 26, 2009

As I see it, the most important single item in President Obama's budget is his commitment to a cap-and-trade plan (to limit and reduce carbon emissions). It represents nothing less than an absolutely breath-taking attempt at reengineering the entire American economy. The White House expects the system will begin generating revenue for the government in 2012. By auctioning off carbon permits, the White expects the plan to bring some $80 billion a year between from 2012 to 2019. 

1) What this is, of course, is a de facto business tax that will get passed along to workers and consumers. (Not to mention the impact on economic growth.) And not a small tax, at that. Over that same period, the White House expects regular corporate taxes to bring in some $3.8 trillion dollars. So the cap-and-trade auction impose an additional 20 percent tax or cost above that level. And remember that we already have the second highest corporate tax rate in the world.

2) Of that $80 billion, $15 billion would go toward "clean" energy investment. The rest would pay for his Making Work Pay tax credits. So what we have is, in essence, an enormous wealth transfer from job creators to consumers.

3) Let me also go back to something I wrote last summer:

Here is what William Pizer, an economist at Resources for the Future and a lead author on the most recent report from the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said at a symposium earlier this week here in Washington: "As an economist, I am skeptical that [dealing with climate change] is going to make money. You'll have new industries, but they'll be doing what old industries did but a higher net cost.... You'll be depleting other industries."

Of course, many economists will recognize "the green is good for growth" trap that Obama and Clinton have stumbled into. It's just a modern iteration of the famous "broken windows fallacy" where people mistake the shifting of wealth and resources for the creation of new wealth and resources.

Pizer went on to say that calls for dramatic reductions in carbon emissions—the Democrats want 80 percent, John McCain 65 percent—were also unrealistic unless there was"some event"that really galvanized public opinion. Instead, what he predicted was a modest price on carbon via a cap-and-trade plan, a greater push for efficiency, and more regulation of energy-intensive industries.

Impact of Cap and Trade on Commercial Real Estate

Readers of this blog may be interested in a piece I've written at www.LeoWellsBlog.com regarding the potential effect of cap-and-trade on commercial real estate.

Leo Wells of GA @ Nov 09, 2009 17:26:09 PM

IT'S A SCAM

Thanks Reagan for the noting the link in your posting. It is a great resource. Here it is again http://tinyurl.com/klfut8 for those of you who have not see Reagan's posting.

I want to add something for everyone to consider. The success of H.R. 2454 was achieved only by a few votes. In its original form, this legislation was in excess of 1300 pages in length. Reports indicate that an additional 300+ pages were added as late as 4:00 a.m. on the morning of the vote. Here is my question: I wonder whether those voting had truly read the bill in its entirety prior to casting their vote? Surely, I think a bill of this magnitude would warrant a thorough reading and understanding of its contents.

Some things will happen as a result of H.R. 2454. We will see an increase in energy cost, whether it is electricity rates, gas costs, etc. Secondly, thousands upon thousands of manufacturing jobs will be eliminated. Neither of these two things will achieve anything but a disaster.

Glen Johnson of AL @ Sep 16, 2009 09:29:46 AM

Cap and Trade

The passage of the American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009 will drive US jobs overseas. For a country already effected with sky rocketing unemployment, additional lose of jobs will be catastrophic to the economy. In order for businesses to survive, they will be forced to migrate to countries where there exist no cap and trade rules and where their products can be manufactured for a lower cost. You do have a voice in this matter! Let your Senators know that this type of legislation is not in the best interest of the American public. Visit http://tinyurl.com/klfut8.

Reagan Enfinger of GA @ Sep 08, 2009 14:03:21 PM

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Capital Commerce

Capital Commerce

U.S. News business reporter Matthew Bandyk examines the issues, people, and debates that shape the nexus of political and economic life in the nation's capital.

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