This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience. Cookie Policy
Accept
Sign In
The Wall Street Publication
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Americans Should Pay More for Gas, Not Less
Share
The Wall Street PublicationThe Wall Street Publication
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.
The Wall Street Publication > Blog > Markets > Americans Should Pay More for Gas, Not Less
Markets

Americans Should Pay More for Gas, Not Less

Editorial Board Published January 21, 2022
Share
Americans Should Pay More for Gas, Not Less
SHARE

They are a jalopy badly in need of repairs, but America’s fuel-economy rules have been rolling along since 1975, burning more oil and spewing more pollution than their builders intended. Still, when it comes to one of the few roadworthy policies available, a tuneup makes more sense than a trip to the scrap heap.

Many economists will tell you that higher gas taxes make more sense than forcing car makers to sell more efficient vehicles, and they are right. Politics is the art of the possible, though. Last month, the Biden administration tightened up the Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards that the Trump administration had loosened. Unfortunately, CAFE’s design flaws remain: Auto makers selling larger cars face less stringent targets than those selling smaller ones. That difference is generally even wider between passenger cars and light trucks—a category that actually includes larger crossovers and some SUVs, such as the Toyota Rav4, Nissan Rogue and Ford Escape. The discrepancy mattered less in the 1970s when most people drove normal passenger cars.

Economists point out that the size-based feature gives car companies an incentive to manufacture and sell bigger vehicles: to make fuel economy standards easier to meet. There is no clear mechanism in the rule that works to limit the number of gas guzzlers an auto maker sells. There also are several loopholes, such as credit given for technologies that don’t directly improve fuel economy.

“The real-world stringency of footprint-based CAFE standards is by far the most important thing the market doesn’t understand about future oil demand,” says Bob McNally, president of consulting firm Rapidan Energy Group. “I’m shocked it has persisted this long.”

The numbers speak for themselves. Even as standards have tightened over time, the actual sales-adjusted fuel economy rating of new vehicles has been unchanged at around 25 miles per gallon since 2014. That was the year Saudi Arabia and others flooded the oil market to gain market share against U.S. shale.

No wonder U.S. vehicles are among the least efficient globally: The average fuel consumption of newly sold U.S. light-duty vehicles, which include passenger cars and light trucks, exceeds the world’s average by 21% and Europe’s by 46%, according to the International Energy Agency. CAFE hasn’t bent the curve in absolute terms either. Carbon dioxide emissions from motor gasoline (excluding ethanol) were 23% higher in 2019 than in 1980 and the U.S. transportation sector’s motor gasoline consumption has risen by 39% over the same period, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration.

That makes the EPA’s bold 2026 model year goal—55 miles per gallon based on lab tests and 40 based on how people really drive—look iffy. It depends on gas prices and what vehicles people prefer. Detroit certainly won’t be hiring the EPA’s forecasters. Back in 2012, the agency expected about a third of U.S. new vehicle sales in 2020 to come from the sale of light trucks. They actually accounted for more than half.

The EPA says final standards for model years 2023 to 2026 can be reached with a “growing percentage of electrified vehicles,” projecting that electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids will account for 17% of cars manufactured in 2026. That is up from less than 3% of U.S. light-duty vehicle sales in 2021. That seems ambitious.

The rules have evolved over time to close some loopholes that previously reduced compliance costs without boosting gas mileage. For example, EVs were often double-counted and so-called flex-fuel vehicles able to use more ethanol were treated as if their drivers regularly used high-ethanol fuels, giving gas guzzlers stellar mileage on paper. Those flex-fuel vehicles rarely operated on high-ethanol blends and offered no improvement in real-world efficiency, according to a 2017 policy paper by Prof. Michael Greenstone at the University of Chicago, Prof. Cass Sunstein at Harvard and Sam Ori, executive director at the Energy Policy Institute at the University of Chicago.

Taxing carbon emissions or gasoline directly, as Europe does, would be far more cost-efficient. An analysis by Prof. Mark Jacobsen at the University of California, San Diego, showed that the cost per gallon saved through the fuel-economy standard is three to six times higher than a gasoline tax. But raising federal gasoline taxes, which have stayed at an inflation-unadjusted 18.4 cents a gallon since 1993, would be political suicide. Carbon taxes are deeply unpopular, too.

Instead, economists have come up with some tweaks government agencies might be able to implement within the existing statute. In a policy paper published last year, Prof. Koichiro Ito at the University of Chicago suggested getting rid of the distinction between cars and light trucks, arguing “there is no economic rationale that can justify less stringent economy regulations for SUVs than other passenger cars.” Prof. Ito suggests that the Transportation Department might be able to do this on its own. Messrs. Greenstone, Sunstein and Ori propose a cap-and-trade system that starts with a limit on a vehicle’s lifetime fuel consumption and carbon dioxide emissions from each year’s new vehicle sales, suggesting that the EPA should have broad discretion to do this.

Fuel-economy standards, laments Mr. Ori, “have a deceptive way of being palatable, specifically because car buyers don’t actually see the cost broken out.”

Luckily for government agencies, plenty of research has been done to point out exactly what those costs are and where the holes are located. They can still use the tools they have to tighten the screws and soup up this clunker.

Money is a sticking point in climate-change negotiations around the world. As economists warn that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius will cost many more trillions than anticipated, WSJ looks at how the funds could be spent, and who would pay. Illustration: Preston Jessee/WSJ

Write to Jinjoo Lee at [email protected]

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

TAGGED:MarketsPAIDWall Street Publication
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Meat Loaf, ‘Bat Out of Hell’ rock superstar, dies at 74 Meat Loaf, ‘Bat Out of Hell’ rock superstar, dies at 74
Next Article China’s Yield Advantage Over U.S. Bonds Narrows China’s Yield Advantage Over U.S. Bonds Narrows

Editor's Pick

Brooke Hogan Written Out of Hulk’s Will (At Her Personal Request)

Brooke Hogan Written Out of Hulk’s Will (At Her Personal Request)

Studying Time: 3 minutes Brooke Hogan isn’t in her dad’s will, a brand new report reveals. Regardless of years of…

By Editorial Board 4 Min Read
A brand new elite member bank card is out as issuers goal rich prospects
A brand new elite member bank card is out as issuers goal rich prospects

A ‘Mornings with Maria’ panel offers their reactions to the December jobs…

5 Min Read
Workforce of rat-hunting terriers helps remedy Bay Space metropolis’s infestation drawback
Workforce of rat-hunting terriers helps remedy Bay Space metropolis’s infestation drawback

Recognized for his or her innate looking talents, these small furry pals…

3 Min Read

Oponion

Rekha Gupta To Be Delhi CM As BJP MLAs Elect Her As Legislature Get together Chief

Rekha Gupta To Be Delhi CM As BJP MLAs Elect Her As Legislature Get together Chief

Final Up to date:February 19, 2025, 23:45 IST Rekha Gupta…

February 19, 2025

Sonia Sotomayor refusing to enter Supreme Court because Neil Gorsuch won’t wear mask: Report

Justice Sonia Sotomayor reportedly won’t attend…

January 18, 2022

Ozzy Osbourne Pronounces Retirement, Will Reunite With Black Sabbath For Remaining Live performance

Studying Time: 3 minutes It’s the…

February 5, 2025

CIF NorCal soccer regionals 2025: Opening-round schedule

CIF NorCal soccer regionals Boys Division…

March 2, 2025

FTX a Blueprint for Pursuing Offshore Crypto Exchanges

MarketsCurrenciesCryptocurrencyCFTC’s complaint draws on leeway in…

December 14, 2022

You Might Also Like

Markets now betting Fed will minimize charges in September after disappointing jobs report
Markets

Markets now betting Fed will minimize charges in September after disappointing jobs report

Morgan Stanley Wealth administration CIO Lisa Shalett joins ‘Barrons Roundtable’ to research the present market outlook for traders after the…

3 Min Read
ETF buyers take ‘man of steel’ view, inflows on tempo for file 12 months
Markets

ETF buyers take ‘man of steel’ view, inflows on tempo for file 12 months

Vertiv CEO Giordano Albertazzi discusses AI energy firms on 'The Claman Countdown.' Regardless of the whiplash of President Donald Trump’s…

4 Min Read
Tesla grants Musk large pay deal to maintain CEO on board amid authorized battle
Markets

Tesla grants Musk large pay deal to maintain CEO on board amid authorized battle

William Blair power and energy applied sciences group head Jed Dorsheimer discusses what to look out for after the Tesla…

4 Min Read
Microsoft joins unique T market cap membership after AI surge, becoming a member of just one different firm
Markets

Microsoft joins unique $4T market cap membership after AI surge, becoming a member of just one different firm

Angelo Zino, a CFRA Analysis senior fairness analyst, discusses the efficiency of Microsoft, Meta and the general tech sector within…

4 Min Read
The Wall Street Publication

About Us

The Wall Street Publication, a distinguished part of the Enspirers News Group, stands as a beacon of excellence in journalism. Committed to delivering unfiltered global news, we pride ourselves on our trusted coverage of Politics, Business, Technology, and more.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?