Oct 31 2009
Taxing oil is a bad plan and a bad strategy
When the cost to produce something increases, that means one of two things will happen: either the production levels will go down, or the price to consumers will increase. It is simple economics. When production costs increase, production goes down or prices go up. When production costs increase, the cost to consumers doesn’t go down - that is backwards.
What does this have to do with California finances? Want-to-be-attorney-general Nava is proposing that California add a 10% severance tax on oil taken out of the ground in this state, and dedicate 9.9% of that tax to higher education. This proposal was floated in the late budget rounds before the latest budget cuts were put into place and was, wisely, defeated then. It should be dropped now too.
Gas prices in California are already high (read about why, here). Most of the oil taken out of the ground in California stays in California. It helps keep transportation costs low. The blend of gas that California uses is made in very few places. If the oil supply in California constricts because of the new tax, then oil will have to be imported - or gas will have to be imported. If gas is imported, the transportation costs will be huge since the only place that makes the blend California uses is in Europe. If oil is imported, then we are just increasing our dependence on foriegn oil. These are both huge problems that might occur if the cost of oil production rises.
Of course, the other alternative is that Californians simply pay higher gas prices. We already pay some of the highest prices in the country, why do something that would raise this? When there is talk of raising the gas tax, it is always the Democrats who cry foul - saying that a higher gas tax will hurt those who most need access to the gas - the poor. Why then, do they suddenly seem so willing to do something that would almost certainly cause gas prices to increase? It is contradictory to support the oil extraction tax but not support raising the gas tax.
Lastly, there is a legal problem. It is unclear whether 9.9% of this tax could go to higher education. The Prop. 98 formulas are so complex, it is unclear if this tax could be divided that way. And why should it? What is special about higher education that they deserve 9.9% of the revenues for this tax? Aren’t there other groups that would like their share of state funding increased as well? Why shouldn’t this money go to the General Fund and be used to pay off debt? Why not spend it on programs that are proven to work, and contribute to California society - like career technical education? Why higher education? Simply because they lobbied hard for it? That is no excuse. When state money given to higher education is traced to athletics (as it can be at the U.C. system) or to remedial classes (as it can be at the CSU system); why should they get more? Prove you can spend it on actual higher education and maybe more sympathy would be shown to you.
Higher gas prices, or less oil production, is not what California needs. Drop this “oil severance” tax idea, and simply put your energy to working with what the state has now.


