We've been hearing of gas price woes at the pumps lately, along with various strategies on how to cope.
Before we look at solutions, I think we first need to look at the problem. For years governments have been subsidizing the gas industry via tax exemptions etc., resulting in artificially low gas prices. Through in psychology and supply and demand, and you have a recepe for disaster. This artificially low cost of gas over the years has encouraged urbanites to move to the suburbs, farmers to move farther away from the cities, and more people to buy bigger cars and governments to build more highways. Sooner or later this was bound to catch up with us as demand eventually outstripped supply, and now here we are. And since gas is already subsidised, it's not like we can just give gas companies a tax exemption since they already have that!
So if keeping the cost of gas artifically low for years is the cause of high gas costs today, then certainly pushing the price of gas up should achieve the exact opposite effect.
Let's suppose we shifted taxes to gas (e.g. introduce income splititng for families, and raise taxes on gas). Suddenly, with the cost of gas up, farmers would want to move back to the suburbs and suburbanites to the cities, people would want to trade their SUVs in for bicycles and governments would not need to build as many highways anymore. This would drive demand for gas down over time as people adjust to the new lifestyle, resulting eventually to a drop in gas prices. After all, if keeping the price artifially low all these years contributed to the steady increase in demand and thus prices, then certainly bringing the price up is bound to gradually reduce demand over many years and thus prices too.
Simple logic, really.
Before we look at solutions, I think we first need to look at the problem. For years governments have been subsidizing the gas industry via tax exemptions etc., resulting in artificially low gas prices. Through in psychology and supply and demand, and you have a recepe for disaster. This artificially low cost of gas over the years has encouraged urbanites to move to the suburbs, farmers to move farther away from the cities, and more people to buy bigger cars and governments to build more highways. Sooner or later this was bound to catch up with us as demand eventually outstripped supply, and now here we are. And since gas is already subsidised, it's not like we can just give gas companies a tax exemption since they already have that!
So if keeping the cost of gas artifically low for years is the cause of high gas costs today, then certainly pushing the price of gas up should achieve the exact opposite effect.
Let's suppose we shifted taxes to gas (e.g. introduce income splititng for families, and raise taxes on gas). Suddenly, with the cost of gas up, farmers would want to move back to the suburbs and suburbanites to the cities, people would want to trade their SUVs in for bicycles and governments would not need to build as many highways anymore. This would drive demand for gas down over time as people adjust to the new lifestyle, resulting eventually to a drop in gas prices. After all, if keeping the price artifially low all these years contributed to the steady increase in demand and thus prices, then certainly bringing the price up is bound to gradually reduce demand over many years and thus prices too.
Simple logic, really.