Many Americans find the debate in Washington over adopting a
"cap-and-trade" program to reduce carbon dioxide a bit confusing.
That's understandable. Put simply, it's a tax on energy
consumption.
In fact, it would be a huge tax. If enacted, cap-and-trade would
be one of the government's largest revenue sources within the next
decade.
It also would break one of President Obama's promises. In his
speech before Congress in February, he said, "If your family earns
less than $250,000 a year, you will not see your taxes increased a
single dime." Unless you use energy, apparently.
You won't hear the proponents of cap-and-trade calling it a tax,
however. The Obama administration and many members of Congress
claim any money generated by cap-and-trade would be "climate
revenue." As if every time the temperature rose (or even fell), the
government would magically receive more money. Not quite. It's a
tax on your energy bill, plain and simple.
The administration's federal budget blueprint, however,
maintains that everything will be all right. Why? Because the money
would be recycled back to the people. Under the Environmental
Protection Agency's section of the budget, about $80 billion per
year in energy tax revenues would be dispersed as a tax cut to low-
and middle-income workers and used for renewable technology
investment, beginning in 2012, if cap-and-trade becomes law.
But the Congressional Budget Office estimates the tax revenues
from cap-and-trade could be much higher - as much as $300 billion
per year by 2020. Deep in the details of the budget, the Obama
administration acknowledges this when it suggests additional
revenue would be redistributed to the public and when it says those
"climate revenues" would be used for tax cuts.
Still, the numbers don't add up. The administration sets aside
$400 per individual and $800 per couple, but that diminishes for
individuals making $75,000 or more and for couples making more than
$150,000. It phases out completely for individuals whose income is
more than $100,000 and couples with incomes of more than $200,000 -
clearly less than the $250,000 mark in Mr. Obama's pledge.
It may get worse. A new study by Bryan Buckley and Sergey
Mityakov of Clemson University found that the cap-and-trade
approach contained in a bill introduced last summer by Sens. Joe
Lieberman, Connecticut independent, and John Warner, Virginia
Republican, would, in effect, hit the average American household
with a tax increase of $1,100 in 2008 - an increase that would rise
to more than $1,400 in 2015.
There goes that "single dime" - and then some.
Such a tax increase might be justifiable, arguably, if the
result were more jobs. But significantly taxing our most reliable
sources of energy would only increase unemployment by slowing an
already dragging economy. According a report on the
Lieberman-Warner bill by the Heritage Foundation's Center for Data
Analysis, cap-and-trade could result in job losses of 900,000 in
some years.
Americans should understand the costs of an energy tax,
particularly in such tough economic conditions. Especially
important, this tax falls disproportionately on the poor. Because
low-income households spend a larger percentage of their income on
energy, the tax is very regressive.
Worse, this high tax would be for naught, as cutting carbon
solely in the United States would change global temperatures by
just a fraction of a degree. Analysis by the EPA shows that a 60
percent reduction in CO2 emissions by 2050 would reduce global
temperature by 0.1 to 0.2 degree Celsius by 2095.
A multilateral approach wouldn't fare much better. Just ask
Europe. The Kyoto Protocol was a failure, and the ebbs and flows of
the market are causing a number of hiccups in the European Union's
carbon-trading plan. As a result, permit prices are falling,
electricity prices are up, and carbon reduction is negligible. And
this doesn't even include two of the world's biggest polluters,
India and China.
In a case of international cooperation, India, China and the
rest of the developing world would have to revert to their 2000
levels of CO2 emissions by 2050. On a per-capita basis, China would
backtrack to about one-tenth of what the U.S. emitted in 2000.
India and most of the developing world would have to drop to even
lower levels. This scenario is a fantasy and would de-develop the
developing world.
So what can we expect from cap-and-trade? A lot of gain (in the
form of tax revenue) for the federal government - and a lot of
economic pain for the American consumer. All for little, if any,
environmental gain.
Nicolas
Loris is a Researcher Assistant in the Thomas A. Roe Institute
for Economic Policy Studies at The Heritage Foundation.