| on Jun 12, 2008, 03:53 PM E.S.T.
|
WHAT IS a "reasonable" corporate profiit? Is it 8 percent, 16
percent, 25 percent? What profit is unreasonable? Don't know? The
Democratic majority in Congress thinks it does. And that should scare
everyone.
Senate Republicans on Tuesday blocked a windfall
profits tax proposal that would tax any "unreasonable" profit made by
big oil companies. Yes, that word is actually in the bill. How is
Congress to determine what level of profit is unreasonable? Well,
that's the scary part. Would you let Congress determine what level of
profit your business should make, and then confiscate the rest?
Of
course you wouldn't. But "Big Oil" is the bogeyman of the day, blamed
by Democrats for high gas prices (when they aren't blaming Republicans
in general and President Bush in particular). So the Democrats consider
it fair game for unfair and unreasonable punishment by the government.
The truth, however, is that the case for this new tax is nonexistent.
First,
oil company profits are not "unreasonable," however one might define
that term. Oil and gas companies earn an average of 8.3 cents per
dollar of revenue, compared to 7.8 cents for the Dow Jones average, the
San Francisco Chronicle reported in April. And those huge oil company
profits are big in dollar, but not percentage, terms.
Exxon-Mobil
has earned more money than any other American company in the past five
years. But last year, it's most profitable ever, its profit was only
10.9 percent of revenues, Fortune magazine reported last month. Bank of
America's profits were 12.6 percent, Pfizer's were 16.8 percent,
Coca-Cola's were 20.7 percent, Google's were 25.3 perccent, and
Microsoft's were 27.5 percent. Whose profits are "unreasonable"?
While
Exxon-Mobil was earning 10.9 percent profit last year, it paid 44
percent of its revenues in taxes, The Wall Street Journal's MarketWatch
reported on Tuesday. Forty-four percent! The government took four times
as much from Exxon-Mobil's revenues as shareholders did. "Big Oil"
isn't paying its fair share? Hogwash.
You might also be
interested to know that 52 percent of Exxon-Mobil's stock is owned by
fund investors such as mutual and pension funds. That means you. If it
is slapped with a windfall profits tax, your retirement plan might be
the one paying the price.
And if all that weren't enough, there
is the evidence from the 1980s. In 1980, President Jimmy Carter
advocated and Congress imposed a windfall profits tax on oil companies.
Guess what happened? Domestic oil exploration dropped, and the promised
tax revenues did not materialize. It actually made us more dependent on
foreign oil. Isn't that what Congress wants to prevent?
In their
push to tax oil companies even more for the sole reasons that they have
made record profits lately and the public wrongly suspects those
profits of being responsible for high gas prices, Sen. Barack Obama and
his Democratic Party are trying to move us back to the failed thinking
of the late 1970s. That would be economically harmful, not helpful.
The
idea that imposing confiscatory taxes on oil companies will somehow
reduce the price of oil has no basis in fact. It shows the flawed
economic thinking of a party that still assumes, despite all evidence
to the contrary, that high taxes help the country, low taxes hurt, and
the government can make everything better by asserting greater control. Source
|