Cap-and-Trade’s Projected
Cost to Americans
Range from $1,761 to $3,100
Per Household
By Dan Weil of Newsmax.com
The Obama administration has concluded
privately that a cap-and-trade law would cost every American household $1,761 a
year — or a national total of nearly $200 billion a year, the equivalent of
hiking personal income taxes by about 15 percent.
The previously unreleased Treasury
Department analysis, which CBS News reported, says the new law would require
new taxes between $100 billion to $200 billion a year. That’s how Treasury
analysts arrived at the $1,761 per household figure.
“Given the administration’s proposal to
auction all emission allowances, a cap-and-trade program could generate federal
receipts on the order of $100 to $200 billion annually,” according to the
document, which was written by Judson Jaffe, who joined the Treasury Department’s
Office of Environment and Energy in January this year.
Because personal income tax revenues bring
in around $1.37 trillion a year, a $200 billion additional tax would be the
equivalent of a 15 percent increase a year. A $100 billion additional tax would
represent a 7 percent or 8 percent increase a year. That finding has been
echoed by other internal Obama administration documents on the subject.
“Economic costs will likely be on the order
of 1 percent of our Gross Domestic Product, making them equal in scale to all
existing environmental regulation,” according to a second memorandum that was
prepared for Obama’s transition team after the November election.
CBS reported these figures based on
documents that the free-market Competitive Enterprise Institute obtained under
the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) and released on September 16th.
Other figures developed in studies for a new
cap-and-trade law have been even more prohibitive.
House Republican Leader John Boehner has
estimated that the additional tax bill would be at least $366 billion a year,
or $3,100 a year per family. The Heritage Foundation says that, by 2035, “the
typical family of four will see its direct energy costs rise by over $1,500 per
year.”
Christopher Horner, a senior fellow at the
Competitive Enterprise Institute who filed the FOIA request, told CBS, “Heritage
is saying publicly what the administration is saying to itself privately. It’s
nice to see they’re not spinning each other behind closed doors.”
Democrats pushing such legislation,
meanwhile, have relied on estimates from MIT’s John Reilly, who put the cost at
$800 a year per family. They insist that tax credits to low-income households
could offset part of the bite.
And responding to release of the document,
The Environmental Defense Fund issued a statement insisting that the figures
ignore the cost savings to consumers from cap-and-trade legislation.“Even if a
100 percent auction was a live legislative proposal, which it’s not, that math
ignores the redistribution of revenue back to consumers,” the environmental
fund’s statement said. “It only looks at one side of the balance sheet. It
would only be true if you think the Administration was going to pile all the
cash on the White House lawn and set it on fire.”
The Democrats are “not telling you the cost
— they’re not telling you the benefit,” says Horner, who wrote the Politically Incorrect Guide to Global Warming.
“If they don’t tell you the cost, and they don’t tell you the benefit, what
are they telling you? They’re just talking about global salvation.”