Drive Much? Get Ready for a Mileage Tax!

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US CBO: Taxing mileage a ‘practical option’ for revenue enhancement

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The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) this week released a report that said taxing people based on how many miles they drive is a possible option for raising new revenues and that these taxes could be used to offset the costs of highway maintenance at a time when federal funds are short.

The report discussed the proposal in great detail, including the development of technology that would allow total vehicle miles traveled (VMT) to be tracked, reported and taxed, as well as the pros and cons of mandating the installation of this technology in all vehicles.

“In the past, the efficiency costs of implementing a system of VMT charges — particularly the costs of users’ time for slowing and queuing at tollbooths — would clearly have outweighed the potential benefits from more efficient use of highway capacity,” CBO wrote. “Now, electronic metering and billing are making per-mile charges a practical option.”

The report was requested by Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-N.D.), who held a hearing on transportation funding in early March. In that hearing, Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood said the Obama administration is hoping to spend $556 billion over the next six years, much of which would go to federal transportation improvement projects.

Conrad said in response that federal funds are tight, and in asking for recommendations on how to raise that money, he noted the possibility of a VMT tax as a way to solve the problem of collecting less in taxes as people move to more fuel-efficient vehicles.

“Do we do gas tax?” Conrad asked. “Do we move to some kind of an assessment that is based on how many miles vehicles go, so that we capture revenue from those who are going to be using the roads who aren’t going to be paying any gas tax, or very little, with hybrids and electric cars?”

Conrad argued some recommendation should be made by his committee on these issues when the Senate considers a transportation spending bill later this year.

CBO’s report stressed it was making no recommendations but seemed to support a VMT tax as a more accurate way of having drivers pay for the costs of highway maintenance. The report said miles driven is a larger factor in highway repairs than fuel consumption and suggested that having drivers pay for the real costs of highways “would involve imposing a combination of fuel taxes and per-mile charges.”

But CBO’s assessment of “costs” was broader than just those costs associated with maintaining highway systems.

“Any given driver’s highway use also imposes costs on other users, on nearby nonusers, on the environment, and on the economy in the form of congestion, risk of accidents, noise, emissions of greenhouse gases and pollutants that affect local air quality, and dependence on foreign oil,” CBO said.

On how to implement the idea, CBO said it is unclear how much it would cost to “install metering equipment in all of the nation’s cars and trucks.”

“Having the devices installed as original equipment under a mandate to vehicle manufacturers would be relatively inexpensive but could lead to a long transition; requiring vehicles to be retrofitted with the devices could be faster but much more costly, and the equipment could be more susceptible to tampering than factory-installed equipment might be,” CBO said.

The report added that VMT taxes could be tracked and even collected at filling stations. “If VMT taxes were collected at the pump, each time fuel was purchased, information would be sent from a device in the vehicle to a device at the filling station,” it said.

CBO also suggested different VMT tax rates might be assessed to different vehicles because heavier vehicles do more road damage, and rates might change depending on whether miles are driven at peak use times or during less congested hours.

CBO did acknowledge that privacy concerns may be a hurdle to implementing a VMT tax because electronic tracking of miles driven might provide too much personal information to the government. However, CBO noted that some have proposed restricting the information that would be transmitted to the government.
 
The fuck ... next thing you know they're gonna be taxing us for how much piss we piss, and how much tap water we drink.

:angry:
 
this is just foolish, I think they are begging for a revolution in this country...

they tax tax tax, and never show us where all this money is going..

it aint going on the roads, it aint going to the schools as dumbed down as we are.. seriously where the fuck is all this tax dollar going...

this aint the united states of america its the united states of getting fucked in the A....

just ridiculous, and we keep thinking the average white dude or the average brother in the hood is the enemy...

we keep attacking the tail and let the head off the hook....

you know what, fuck it I am telling you now, this shit will never ever ever happen..

I am just going to deny everything fuck gettin upset or emotional, just deny and negate it and tell them to try it if they dare.... they say blacks and whites will never get together, keep fuckin with our money and watch...

in fact we need to just start dealing with silver coins and dollars and tell them to shove their worthless greenback up their revenue.....

its a matter of time before we start to push back...
 
Historical-Perspective-on-Top-Tax-Rate.jpg

Since you can't tax the rich anymore the US has to get revenues from some where!
:smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
Historical-Perspective-on-Top-Tax-Rate.jpg

Since you can't tax the rich anymore the US has to get revenues from some where!
:smh::smh::smh::smh:

Yep. Before they even think about this, they need to address the top tax rates and get some revenue there.

I don't see this having the political will from either side of going forward so I'm not going to get as irate as some of the others in this thread.
 
Yep. Before they even think about this, they need to address the top tax rates and get some revenue there.

I don't see this having the political will from either side of going forward so I'm not going to get as irate as some of the others in this thread.

The Reagan Tax cut for the rich did not "trickle down" like he said it would with his Voodoo Economics. All of the Government revenue raising just defer the taxes collections to other area of the Government I.E. to the states, counties, cities, and towns.
It basically turn the US economy from a producing to a service economy!!! I mean Walmart!!? the US largest employer hiring at $7.25 an hour???
:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:
At this rate the US will three new classes:
1. The super rich
2. The rich
3. The poor!!!!

This will happen Not this year, nor next, but maybe 50 years from now.........yes!.
anim_e3099ee3-46e2-d964-4535-839620cc780a.gif

:smh::smh::smh::smh::smh:
 
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