Treasury Admits Cap-and-Trade is a Massive Tax
Thanks to the relentless work of Christopher Horner at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, U.S. Department of Treasury admitted cap and trade would be a tax that could generate revenue between $100 billion to $200 billion a year. Horner obtained the information from the Treasury by using the Freedom of Information Act. Horner says,
"These are candid, internal discussions of what they are telling each other and what they won’t tell you. The words cap and trade were chosen for a reason, and that is to avoid a vote on tax. This memo tells you it’s a tax. Why else are they discussing hundreds of billions of revenue to be taken from the taxpayer?”
The energy tax amounts to $1,761 a year for families – “the equivalent of hiking personal income taxes by about 15 percent” as stated by Declan McCullagh of CBS News. Horner writes that the Treasury memo offers much more, including:
"the admission that cap-and-trade would cause the loss of steel, paper, aluminum, chemical, and cement manufacturing jobs which, as happened under Europe’s scheme, tend to export themselves to saner environments. Windfall profits under the scheme of allocating the ration coupons, the Waxman-Markey approach, are also admitted to.”
These admissions are akin to our economic analysis of the Waxman-Markey cap and trade bill where we found:
-- Higher energy and other costs for a household of four averaging nearly $3,000 per year between 2012 and 2035.
-- Cumulative gross domestic product (GDP) losses are $9.4 trillion for the same time period;
-- Single-year GDP losses reach $400 billion by 2025 and will ultimately exceed $700 billion;
-- Net job losses approach 1.9 million in 2012 and could approach 2.5 million by 2035. Manufacturing loses 1.4 million jobs in 2035;
-- A typical family of four will pay, on average, an additional $829 each year for energy-based utility costs; and
-- Gasoline prices will rise by 58 percent ($1.38 more per gallon) and average household electric rates will increase by 90 percent;
And according to climatologists, all of these costs will be paid for no more than a 0.2 degree (Celsius) moderation in world temperature increases by 2100, and no more than a 0.05 degree reduction by 2050.
“Heritage is saying publicly what the administration is saying to itself privately,” says Horner.












Treasury Admits Cap-and-Trade is a Massive Tax
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Shenanigans
We've all seen how well the "FREE MARKET" works. The free market is bullshit. If you're a major player in the free market it works great for you. If not, oh well...sucks to be you.
Another biased POV.
And yes, I've read both of Horner's articles.
- agadorspartacus
September 17, 2009 2:48PM
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I also suggest everyone else...
...read both articles and background information on CEI and CAP and come to your own conclusions.
- agadorspartacus
September 17, 2009 2:51PM
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Heritage Foundation
It behooves the Heritage Foundation to take information like this and spin it to their benefit. The cost increases span two decades and energy prices are going to increase anyway (like everything else) whether it's oil or wind or mules.
We can't keep relying on energy sources that pollute our planet and are finite. Any jobs that might be lost due to changes in technology will also create demand for jobs in new clean energy industries AND clean technology will benefit our environment and therefore us.
I'll shut up. For now.
- agadorspartacus
September 17, 2009 4:16PM
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Didn't I already trash this study?
Oh, that's right.
http://www.opposingviews.com/articles/opinion-cap-and-trade-will-cost-you-a-suitcase-of-beer
1 - The CBO estimates a cost of $175 per year by 2020 in increase to households. And this is only nominal cost, this is like nothing when adjusting for real economic growth that will happen in the timespan. This is consistent also with the Energy Administrations Analysis which shows slightly lower costs per family by 2020. They aren't accounting for key provisions in the bill like emission trading and even basic economic growth and this is how they come up with these ridiculously high numbers that are 100% false.
2 - Gas prices. This is just made up, it's 25% higher by 2030 according to EPA, Energy Administration Agency, MIT etc. With real wage growth, that's like a blip.
3 - Job loss: Job loss that far out (2035) is impossible to predict with any reasonable accuracy. 1.9 million jobs lost by 2012 is a dramatically overstated figure due to the unreasonable assumptions about job growth, government spending efficacy, and the metric used is not even peer reviewed and available to the public! It also fails to account for the millions of green jobs that would be created, estimated at 1.7-1.8 million over the next 10 years.
4 - About the GDP. This is a load of BS. Again, they don't even account for emission trading which is so hugely important to not dramatically hurting GDP. In fact, the GDP decrease is based only on a decreased rate of growth, of only around 2.5% less by 2050 if you take liberal estimates. Of course, this only happens if it's done by respectable researchers rather than hacks. In other words, we'll have to wait to 2051 to be as rich as we would've been by 2050. How ridiculous is this.
I also think it's amusing that we think that increase in hurricanes, droughts, heat waves (remember power outages a few years ago that cost billions ...) etc. are going to cost nothing to our economy . If it continues on it's path and you view the predicted outcomes you can be sure it would cost trillions per year to global economy and several hundred billion to the US every single year. The cost of doing nothing just from hurricane damage is around $1 trillion by 2050 ...
This analysis is silly, wrong, and propaganda.
- caelum
September 18, 2009 10:27AM
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