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- Newsgroups: sci.energy
- Path: sparky!uunet!infonode!cherokee!greg
- From: greg@cherokee.NoSubdomain.NoDomain (Greg Moritz)
- Subject: Re: Petroleum subsidies question.
- Message-ID: <1992Nov15.235435.12335@infonode.ingr.com>
- Lines: 26
- Sender: usenet@infonode.ingr.com (Usenet Administrator)
- Reply-To: greg@cherokee.b23b.ingr.com (Greg Moritz)
- Organization: Dazix, An Intergraph Company
- Date: Sun, 15 Nov 1992 23:54:35 GMT
-
- dpeders1@cc.swarthmore.edu (Daniel Pedersen) asks:
-
- =Does anyone out there have any figures or an estimate of the amount
- =of subsidies (direct or indirect) for oil and fossil fuels? I know
- =that the price of gasoline is <half of what it is in the rest of the
- =industrialized world. I'm convinced that the price of ... is subsidized,
-
- carl@SOL1.GPS.CALTECH.EDU (Carl J Lydick) responded:
-
- > ... Great Britain ... gasoline there is taxed at a rate of about 260%.
- > Now, if you consider not taxing gasoline at that high a rate to be a
- > subsidy, then I guess gasoline is subsidized in this country. Me, I
- > just think that the Brits are overtaxed.
-
- The price of gasoline absent of taxes would be about $1.18 - .40 =
- $.78 per gallon of regular (87 octane) unleaded here in Huntsville, AL.
- (The 40 cents comes from 4 cents local, 18 cents state, the rest,
- Federal. I may be off by a couple of cents here or there, but the
- idea is the same.) Gas prices, adjusted for inflation and taxes are
- lower than they have been since the 1920's. Adjusted for inflation,
- the price is still lower than it was back in the 1960's (here in the US).
-
- For better or for worse, this low price probably accounts for the
- tremendous per-capita imports of petroleum in the US and accounts for
- $60-70 billion of our trade deficit with the rest of the world.
-