At the gas station near my home in Burbank, California, gas prices last week were an astronomical $6.50 per gallon ($1.72 per liter), much higher than the nationwide average of $4.67, and just above the statewide average of $6.19 per gallon. Filling up the tank can cost a shocking $100. Working families cannot afford this, and it doesn’t have to be this way.
The reasons for high gas prices are many and intertwined. Our economy’s rapid recovery from COVID-19 has led to a surge in demand, as people resume their pre-pandemic lives.
These factors became even more apparent in per-gallon prices as we entered the peak driving season last weekend and companies began switching over to their costlier summer fuel blends. And of course, Vladimir Putin’s brutal invasion of Ukraine prompted many countries to boycott Russian oil imports, further reducing global supply.
But this is not the full explanation for the astronomical numbers you’re facing at the pump. To figure out the rest of the equation, you need only glance at the balance sheets of the world’s five biggest oil companies -- Shell, Chevron, Exxon Mobil, ConocoPhillips and BP. Oil companies are charging consumers sky-high prices at the pump -- far more than necessitated by their costs -- because they can. Basically, they view the crisis as an opportunity to grab even bigger profits.
In the first quarter of last year, Shell posted $3.2 billion in profit. During the same period in 2022, its fortunes ballooned to $9.1 billion. Exxon Mobil netted $2.7 billion in the first quarter of 2021, a figure that skyrocketed to $8.8 billion in the first quarter of 2022. Chevron’s first-quarter profit more than quadrupled -- from $1.37 billion in 2021 to $6.5 billion in 2022. Altogether, the five oil giants have amassed 300 percent more in profits this year than they did this time last year. This isn’t the result of the pandemic or the war. It’s just simple greed.
Nor are the oil companies using these profits to expand production to meet the surging demand of people returning to work and their daily lives. Instead, the corporations are spending the cash on large dividends for shareholders and tens of billions of dollars in stock buybacks for their investors.
It is unconscionable that this industry is taking advantage of the fallout from the horrible war and adding to people’s economic pain.
Some people have proposed that we suspend the federal gas tax -- about 18.4 cents per gallon -- as a way of alleviating some of the pain at the pump. I support that idea, but there are a couple things we need to keep in mind. First, if we do away with the federal gas tax, oil companies will simply raise their prices and pocket the amount that would have been paid as tax. And that won’t help consumers at all.
And second, the federal gas tax provides the resources for the Highway Trust Fund, which finances the construction and maintenance of roads, highways, bridges and public transit systems nationwide.
That’s why I introduced the Federal Gas Tax Suspension and Windfall Profits Tax Act, to address both of these issues at once.
The bill would suspend the federal gas tax through the end of 2023, which would provide some immediate relief at the pump. To prevent the oil companies from jacking up their prices further, the bill would also impose a new 50 percent tax on income that is in excess of their reasonably inflated average profit. This windfall profits tax would be used to fund highway and mass transit projects while the gas tax is suspended.
This is not a complete solution, but it’s a start. Oil companies could still choose to increase profits even with the disincentive of losing half of that income. That’s why the anti-price-gouging legislation the House passed last month, which would empower the Federal Trade Commission to crack down on such abusive practices and punish bad actors, is so important.
To get us through the dire impacts of inflation, we need price relief at the pump right away. The combination of a holiday from the gas tax and a windfall profits tax on the oil companies could help.
But at the end of the day, we will remain at the mercy of the oil industry, petromonarchies and Russian dictators unless we wean ourselves off fossil fuels. Over the longer term, we will destroy our planet if we continue on the present course.
We need to build a green new economy that phases out our reliance on petroleum and dramatically expands the use of renewable sources of energy. Otherwise, future generations will literally pay the price.
Adam B. SchiffAdam B. Schiff, a Democrat, represents California’s 28th Congressional District and is chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence. He wrote this for the Los Angeles Times. -- Ed.
(Tribune Content Agency) By Korea Herald (
khnews@heraldcorp.com)