Response to Nye: a Pigou tax on gasoline is robust to further considerations.
Parry, Ian W.H. ; Small, Kenneth A.
John Rye reminds us of some important--and often
neglected--principles of welfare economics for converting estimates of
externalities into Pigovian tax recommendations. Most significant among
these are:
* Pigovian taxes are reduced when there is some scope for the
private sector to internalize externalities.
* Pigovian taxes interact with pre-existing tax distortions in
labor and capital markets, and this affects their optimal levels.
* Pigovian taxes also need to account for pre-existing regulations,
or distortions, affecting activities that are closely related to the
taxed activity.
* The behavioral response to Pigovian taxes may be very limited.
Despite the usefulness of these points, we dispute Prof. Nye's
claim that they cast doubt on Pigovian tax estimates in the specific
case of gasoline.
INTERNALIZING EXTERNALITIES Clearly, the case for corrective
taxation is undermined to the extent that private agents might account
for "externalities" in their own decisions. For example, a
dominant airline might partly internalize congestion at a hub airport in
its fares and flight schedule if the costs of delays are largely borne
by its own passengers and crews. However, the main externalities
relevant for fuel taxes--including local pollution, congestion, and
climate change--involve huge numbers of individuals producing widely
dispersed external costs. That makes any internalization infeasible--by
Coasian bargaining or any other means.
The accident externality is trickier, as motorists presumably account for some accident costs when choosing how much to drive. For
example, motorists may internalize much of the risk of single-vehicle
collisions through their own pain and suffering, monetary payment,
and/or elevated premiums following an insurance claim. Therefore, in
calculating the optimal fuel tax, we relied on studies of accident costs
that carefully separate out just the uninternalized portion.
BROADER FISCAL INTERACTIONS Interactions between externality taxes
and the broader fiscal system have received considerable attention
recently in literature on environmental tax shifts. Those interactions
take two forms: First is the potential efficiency gain from using
Pigovian tax revenues to cut other distortionary taxes such as those on
personal and corporate income, including payroll taxes. Second is
efficiency losses in factor markets as Pigovian taxes drive up the
general price level (e.g., through higher energy costs); the resulting
lowering of real household wages and real return on capital compounds
the depressing effects of taxes on work effort and capital accumulation.
Nye is right that the general thrust of this literature is that the
net impact from these two effects can be an overall loss of economic
efficiency, implying that the optimal externality tax is (moderately)
lower than the Pigovian tax. But there are exceptions to this; for
example when the taxed activity is a relative complement for
leisure--which, we believe, applies to the case of passenger travel by
auto. That is why the fiscal component to the optimal gasoline tax estimate in our 2005 American Economic Review paper turned out to be
positive, implying that some gasoline taxation may be desirable even
without any externalities.
OTHER DISTORTIONS Prof. Nye brings up a whole host of complicating
factors within the transport sector that might, in principle, influence
optimal fuel tax estimates. To treat each of them fully would require an
article at least as long as his. But our general feeling is that the
omitted factors are either unimportant empirically or would actually
strengthen the case for higher fuel taxes. We briefly illustrate with
four examples:
First, Rye notes that OPEC raises world oil prices above free
market levels. However, this does not imply that domestic oil
consumption should be subsidized. That would only push consumption
beyond the economically efficient level--that is, the level at which the
benefit from the last barrel consumed equals the cost to the nation from
importing that barrel. In fact, Paul Leiby, in a 2007 Oak Ridge National
Laboratory report, suggests that market power issues would, if anything,
raise the optimal domestic fuel tax (a consideration that we ignored in
our 2005 paper). This is because the United States is a large oil
consumer and has a moderate degree of monopsony power. In turn, this
implies that world oil prices will fall somewhat following a tax-induced
reduction in U.S. oil consumption, which, up to a point, would improve
domestic welfare. Concerns about the vulnerability of the economy to oil
shocks, compromises in foreign policy from our oil dependence, military
spending to protect oil supplies, etc., would, if anything, further
strengthen the case for higher fuel taxes.
Next, consider other transport markets. We believe that fare
subsidies for mass transit have little relevance for optimal fuel tax
calculations because, nationwide, transit accounts for less than one
percent of passenger travel. By contrast, parking is very relevant, but
the big problem is not monopoly pricing (as Nye suggests) but rather
underpricing of both publicly owned and employer-provided parking that
results from tax and zoning regulations. Accounting for these subsidies
for driving would strengthen the case for higher fuel taxes.
As regards fuel economy regulation of new vehicles, this factors
into optimal fuel tax calculations by weakening the impact of taxes on
fuel economy relative to their impact on miles driven. Higher fuel taxes
will still encourage people to drive less and to use fuel-efficient
vehicles when possible instead of gas-guzzling vehicles. But they may do
little to encourage auto manufacturers to incorporate advanced
fuel-saving technologies into new vehicles, if those technologies are
already being adopted to satisfy tighter fuel economy regulations (which
were recently passed by Congress). Therefore, for any given tax-induced
reduction in fuel use, more of it will come from reduced driving and
less from reducing the average fuel consumed per mile from vehicles on
the road. This makes the tax more effective in reducing driving, which,
as noted below, actually justifies a higher tax rate.
LIMITED RESPONSES A substantial body of empirical work suggests
that gasoline demand is only moderately sensitive to higher fuel prices.
This partly explains, for example, why transportation is expected to
account for a disproportionately small share of the carbon reductions
that would occur if a price were imposed on carbon emissions.
So why bother with fuel taxes if their effects are so small? A main
point of our 2005 paper is that uninternalized externalities varying
with mileage (especially congestion and accidents) are much larger,
empirically, than those varying with fuel use. Thus, it is much more
efficient to address them directly with taxes on mileage rather than
indirectly with fuel taxes. In the latter case, the improved fuel
economy resulting from the fuel tax undermines its Pigovian purpose by
limiting the reduction in driving associated with an extra amount of
fuel tax revenue. In fact, we estimate that an optimized tax on auto
mileage would generate much more revenue than raising the fuel tax to
its optimal level (around $1 per gallon) and would produce four times
the annual efficiency gains. An even better policy would be a true
congestion charge that varies across different urban centers and across
time of day.
CONCLUSION To sum up, it is entirely legitimate for Prof. Nye to
question whether optimal gasoline tax estimates might change when we
take into account a whole host of complicating factors across the
transportation sector and the broader economy. However, some of those
complications can be and were taken explicitly into account in our
analysis; others would have a minor impact; and others would reinforce,
rather than undermine, the efficiency rationale for heavier taxation of
automobiles.
Readings
* "Does Britain or the United States Have the Right Gasoline
Tax?" by Ian W. H. Parry and Kenneth A. Small. American Economic
Review, Vol. 95 (2005).
* "Estimating the Energy Security Benefits of Reduced U.S. Oil
Imports," Report No. ORNL/TM-2007/028, by Paul N. Leiby. Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, February 2007.
* "Optimal Environmental Taxation in the Presence of Other
Taxes: General Equilibrium Analyses," by Lans A. Bovenberg and
Lawrence Goulder. American Economic Review, Vol. 86 (1996).
* "Policy Analysis in the Presence of Distorting Taxes,"
by Ian W. H. Parry and Wallace E. Oates. Journal of Policy Analysis and
Management, Vol. 19 (2000).
* The High Cost of Free Parking, by Donald C. Shoup. American
Planning Association, Planners Press, 2005.
BY IAN W. H. PARRY
Resources for the Future
AND KENNETH A. SMALL
University of California, Irvine
Ian W. H. Parry is the Allen Kneese Chair and a senior fellow at
Resources for the Future. Kenneth A. Small is research professor of
economics and professor emeritus at the University of California,
Irvine.