by lawnchair » Mon 12 Dec 2005, 06:22:34
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')o pay for highways, put a tax on tires instead. Tires wear out at a known ratio to the wear rate of the roads. Easy to figure out how many tax dollars per tire are needed to raise the money to pay for the roads.
Now that's some funny stuff right there! Adequate taxes to pay for roads would be around $1/30miles for a passenger auto. Given a boring 70,000 mile tire life (/4), that's $585 tax per tire.
First, the black market would be impressive. Second, you encourage people to drive on dangerous-as-hell tires rather than pay $2500 to buy new ones. There are already resourceful immigrant neighborhoods who share an "inspection set" of tires, putting them on the car just long enough to pass annual safety check.
I'm for a gas tax that pays for the road system fully. The double-shuffle slight of hand is designed to confuse. Gas taxes pay for transit and bike lanes. So car drivers feel cheated and hate those projects. But, far far more goes to roads out of general revenue (and debt spending) than is taken from the highway fund.
And dub, a very good point. Since gas taxes pay (partially) the cost of roads, gas is an *untaxed* item in the normal sense of tax. I hadn't thought of it.
Yes, it makes rural life more expensive. GOOD! If it costs too much for people to own 10-acre-dreams while commuting 75 miles to their city jobs, maybe it will bring down the cost of rural land for those of us who want to farm in the country and stay in the country.