Friday, May 02, 2008

Shell game

Hillary Clinton and John McCain agree, at least to the extent that they support a gasoline tax holiday this Summer. John is pandering to families with children, saying this will help them buy school supplies. Hillary is pandering to anti-corporate sentiments by saying this will take money from the deep pockets of the Oil oligarchy. Both seem to be pandering to the " not thinking too clearly."

Alison Fitzgerald at Bloomberg.com says that economists in general aren't buying it. A projected savings of $35, spread over the tax holiday isn't going to be very useful, and particularly when acquired a buck or two at a time. The retailers aren't likely to reduce prices very much and the overall ten billion dollar tax revenue will be directed back to the refiners and must of course, reduce the general revenue; a loss that will have to be made up elsewhere. All in all, it looks like a shell game to me and an Exxon Mobil game and a BP game and even a Citgo game.

Clinton is pushing the estimate of a $70 savings to consumers, but Ethan Harris, chief U.S. economist at Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., said families would save only about $18 a month. Burman estimated the total savings from Memorial Day to Labor Day at $28. Even if the savings actually materialized "it would be chump change," he said. An extra beer here and there, a couple of packs of cigarettes and there won't be much left for Johnies new backpack.

But to a nation of chumps, conditioned to slobber like Pavlov's dogs at the phrase "tax cut," it may seem like a good deal. We usually do sit up and beg when a candidate offers to put a dollar in our pocket while sending us a bill for five bucks plus interest and fees. We'll take the nickels and dimes while the roads and bridges continue to crumble and our transportation system, already about the worst in the first world, gets worse and the war grinds on and on.

6 comments:

Intellectual Insurgent said...

Offering to let us keep an extra $18 of our devalued dollars is hardly doing us any favors. If they wanted to save us money, they could do something real. Like say, end the war.

Capt. Fogg said...

It's typical - fill up the Toyota and save a few bucks. Fill up the yacht and save a few hundred.

Guess which income level benefits the most. Even so, it's the people who will save eighteen bucks who will be most enthusiastic.

The emperor tosses some dimes into the cheering crowd of the gleefully oppressed. . .

Buffalo said...

One of these days, probably when it is too late, the American public will quit buying into all of this bullshit.

Intellectual Insurgent said...

You're more optimistic than I Buffalo. As with Rome, as long as you keep the masses distracted with activities at the forum, they won't squawk.

d nova said...

it's a subtle form o vote-buying, like most tax-cut proposals. o course, congress cdn't possibly pass it time 2 go in2 effect on memorial day.

the worst part is u cn't repeal the laws o supply n dmand: slight saving wd cause more buying, polluting air more n pushing up price o crude. we'd feel it in fall n winter.

Capt. Fogg said...

Bread and circuses and scapegoating minorities worked for Nero.

Maybe it's not so subtle, but it works. People will sell their country for a 28 cent discount and never mind that it would cost tens of thousands of jobs, allow the roads and bridges to crumble further and channel more money to Bush's oil buddies.

The asshole in chief keeps talking about turning us into a nation of consumers not savers or investors and then has the nerve to talk about an "ownership society"

I translate "consumer" as cattle to be milked and the ownership he promotes is corporate ownership of us.