Description

Severance taxes on the extraction of oil, gas, and other natural resources have been very popular with politicians because they seem invisible in being spread among a large, diffuse taxpayer base. But do such taxes have serious negative consequences overlooked by legislators? Severance taxes—taxes levied upon the production of oil and natural gas—have long been popular with state governments. Such taxes are thought to have minimal impact upon the areas where petroleum wells are located, the costs of such taxes can be “exported” to a large and dispersed consumer base in other states, and an oil or gas well cannot be moved to another state where taxes are lower. Because of these factors, severance taxes seem like ideal taxes for legislators to impose. But how do severance taxes work in the real world? Are they really as painless as they sound? Because of the immobility of the resource being taxed, do states tend to overtax? In this provocative study, the authors survey state severance taxes and find they tend to lower petroleum production, reduce jobs in the states imposing such taxes, and have negative effects that can ripple throughout a state's economy. Severance taxes look like easy targets for state governments. But as this book demonstrates—using thorough analysis—such taxes are often downright counterproductive and can actually reduce total state tax revenues.

Taxing Energy: Oil Severance Taxation and the Economy

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£39.95

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Hardback by Robert Deacon , Stephen DeCanio

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Severance taxes on the extraction of oil, gas, and other natural resources have been very popular with politicians because they... Read more

    Publisher: Independent Institute,U.S.
    Publication Date: 30/01/1990
    ISBN13: 9780945999690, 978-0945999690
    ISBN10: 0945999690

    Number of Pages: 161

    Non Fiction , Business, Finance & Law

    Description

    Severance taxes on the extraction of oil, gas, and other natural resources have been very popular with politicians because they seem invisible in being spread among a large, diffuse taxpayer base. But do such taxes have serious negative consequences overlooked by legislators? Severance taxes—taxes levied upon the production of oil and natural gas—have long been popular with state governments. Such taxes are thought to have minimal impact upon the areas where petroleum wells are located, the costs of such taxes can be “exported” to a large and dispersed consumer base in other states, and an oil or gas well cannot be moved to another state where taxes are lower. Because of these factors, severance taxes seem like ideal taxes for legislators to impose. But how do severance taxes work in the real world? Are they really as painless as they sound? Because of the immobility of the resource being taxed, do states tend to overtax? In this provocative study, the authors survey state severance taxes and find they tend to lower petroleum production, reduce jobs in the states imposing such taxes, and have negative effects that can ripple throughout a state's economy. Severance taxes look like easy targets for state governments. But as this book demonstrates—using thorough analysis—such taxes are often downright counterproductive and can actually reduce total state tax revenues.

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