Big Oil's (Taxpayer Subsidized) Big Profits
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Big Oil's (Taxpayer Subsidized) Big Profits
Heres an example of how government subsidies distort market economics: Gas prices are down nearly 35 cents from last year, yet this has had virtually no impact on this years first quarter profits of the big oil companies.
On top of the decline in gas prices, several of the top five oil companies -- BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, ExxonMobil, and Shell -- have had significant spills in the last quarter. A ruptured Chevron pipeline spilled thousands of gallons of oil into a
Utah waterway. Shells oil pipeline spilled tens of thousands of gallons of oil in
Texas. Exxons tar sand pipeline spilled up to 126,000 gallons of oil in
Arkansas. All of these spills occurred just in the first quarter. Yet, these spills havent eaten into the companies profits, indicating that fines or cleanup costs arent anticipated to have an impact on the earnings potential.
Of course, someone has to pay to clean up these spills and increasingly, it is the taxpayer that is on the hook.
Tar sands, for example, are not taxed like conventional oil. Normally, a tax is levied on the transport of oil, which goes into a fund to help pay for spill clean-up costs. The fund still covers tar sands spills, but there is no additional revenue coming in from tar sands and when the fund goes broke, the cost of clean up will fall to the taxpayer.
Taxpayer subsidized clean-ups protect big oil company profits. So does a beneficial tax system. Far from the 35 percent top corporate tax rate, ExxonMobils effective tax rate was 13 percent, Chevrons was 19 percent, and ConocoPhillipss was 18 percent. On top of this, each year, the big five oil companies receive $2.4 billion in tax breaks. The special treatment these companies receive explains how gas prices can decrease while liabilities increase, yet have negligible impact on profits.