Taking Liberties
September 15, 2009 9:03 PM

Obama Admin: Cap And Trade Could Cost Families $1,761 A Year

(AP)
The Obama administration has privately concluded that a cap and trade law would cost American taxpayers up to $200 billion a year, the equivalent of hiking personal income taxes by about 15 percent.

A previously unreleased analysis prepared by the U.S. Department of Treasury says the total in new taxes would be between $100 billion to $200 billion a year. At the upper end of the administration's estimate, the cost per American household would be an extra $1,761 a year.

A second memorandum, which was prepared for Obama's transition team after the November election, says this about climate change policies: "Economic costs will likely be on the order of 1 percent of GDP, making them equal in scale to all existing environmental regulation."

The documents (PDF) were obtained under the Freedom of Information Act by the free-market Competitive Enterprise Institute and released on Tuesday.

These disclosures will probably not aid the political prospects of the Democrats' cap and trade bill. The House of Representatives approved it by a remarkably narrow margin in June -- the bill would have failed if only six House members had switched their votes to "no" -- and it faces significant opposition in the Senate.

One reason the bill faces an uncertain future is concern about its cost. House Republican Leader John Boehner has estimated the additional tax bill would be at $366 billion a year, or $3,100 a year per family. Democrats have pointed to estimates from MIT's John Reilly, who put the cost at $800 a year per family, and noted that tax credits to low income households could offset part of the bite. The Heritage Foundation says that, by 2035, "the typical family of four will see its direct energy costs rise by over $1,500 per year."

One difference is that while Heritage's numbers are talking about 26 years in the future, the Treasury Department's figures don't have a time limit.

"Heritage is saying publicly what the administration is saying to itself privately," says Christopher Horner, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute who filed the FOIA request. "It's nice to see they're not spinning each other behind closed doors."

"They're not telling you the cost -- they're not telling you the benefit," says Horner, who wrote the Politically Incorrect Guide to Global Warming. "If they don't tell you the cost, and they don't tell you the benefit, what are they telling you? They're just talking about global salvation."

The FOIA'd document written by Judson Jaffe, who joined the Treasury Department's Office of Environment and Energy in January 2009, says: "Given the administration's proposal to auction all emission allowances, a cap-and-trade program could generate federal receipts on the order of $100 to $200 billion annually." (Obviously, any final cap-and-trade system may be different from what Obama had proposed, and could yield higher or lower taxes.)

Because personal income tax revenues bring in around $1.37 trillion a year, a $200 billion additional tax would be the equivalent of a 15 percent increase a year. A $100 billion additional tax would represent a 7 or 8 percent increase a year.

One odd point: The document written by Jaffee includes this line: "It will raise energy prices and impose annual costs on the order of XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX." The Treasury Department redacted the rest of the sentence with a thick black line.

The Freedom of Information Act, of course, contains no this-might-embarrass-the-president exemption (nor, for that matter, should federal agencies be in the business of possibly suppressing dissenting climate change voices). You'd hope the presidential administration that boasts of being the "most open and transparent in history" would be more forthcoming than this.

Update 9/16/2009: The Environmental Defense Fund has responded to the documents' release with a statement saying, in part:
Even if a 100 percent auction was a live legislative proposal, which it's not, that math ignores the redistribution of revenue back to consumers. It only looks at one side of the balance sheet. It would only be true if you think the Administration was going to pile all the cash on the White House lawn and set it on fire.

The bill passed by the House sends the value of pollution permits to consumers, and it contains robust cost-containment provisions. Every credible and independent economic analysis of the American Clean Energy and Security Act (such as those done by the non-partisan Congressional Budget Office, the Energy Information Administration, and the Environmental Protection Agency) says the costs will be small and affordable -- and that the U.S. economy will grow with a cap on carbon.

Update 9/17/2009: I've written a followup article to respond to erroneous claims from the Center for American Progress.

Declan McCullagh is a correspondent for CBSNews.com. He can be reached at declan@cbsnews.com. You can bookmark the Taking Liberties site here, or subscribe to the RSS feed.
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Add a Comment See all 238 Comments
by johnst1001a November 1, 2009 6:20 AM EST
Of course we can just drop the whole idea of reducing our dependency on foreign oil and continue sending $300 billion out every year to pay for it. This by the way is $1000 for every person in the US, or on average $4000 per family that is lost.
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by johnst1001a November 1, 2009 6:18 AM EST
Of course we can just drop the whole idea of reducing our dependency on foreign oil and continue sending $300 billion out every year to pay for it. This by the way is $1000 for every person in the US, or on average $4000 per family that is lost.
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by denialator October 5, 2009 7:12 PM EDT
This whole cap & tax scheme is based on lies in the first place. It is another scam by the fascist dictator post-turtle prez. and his socialist muzzie buddies to subjugate the faithful American middle class which pays for everything without complaining about it. Well, now it's gotten to the point of not so any more because we've paid all we are able to pay. Now it's time to say NO! We're not paying any more taxes. Global warming, i.e. anthropogenic global change is a scam. It never happened, and never will happen.
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by Stop_the_crying October 5, 2009 3:22 PM EDT
Cap and trade. How about cap and fine anyone that exceeds the limit. All this does is perpetuates the problem. The proposal is Bernie Maddoff accounting methods. No reduction in emissions. Get a grip people.
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by Diogenes_of_Sinope October 1, 2009 3:36 PM EDT
You can see the plan here. Collect taxes from all, give the money back to low income either through tax credits or new gov't programs for the poor. It is nothing but a wealth transfer. This follows the strategy outlined by Obama before he ran for office. Don't directly tax and give, that's too obvious, instead, use programs to conceal the wealth transfer, and in the process enlarge government to increase the gov't payroll and staff it with liberal sycophants.
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by Stevenapoli7 September 29, 2009 6:46 AM EDT
Thanx for the 15% tax hike Obama. So much cost for nothing. This won't put a darn dent in CO2 emissions because S. America, Asia, and Africa aren't joining in. Besides, every time a major volcano erupts ash, that put more CO2 in the air than the sum of all human history.
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by Jodyshouse September 28, 2009 3:10 PM EDT
You were 'not informed' because it's 'not true'. Wise up and check the facts instead of listening to lies from Glen Beck and other right-wing liars (not all rightees are liars).
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by billiebe September 25, 2009 7:52 PM EDT
Mutha Phuka.
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by Mya63 September 18, 2009 11:08 PM EDT
You wanted it, you got it, OBAMA for just under 3 and half more years! Good luck with that! Vote Smart in 2010 and 2012 and you won't have to deal with sneaky underhanded LYING people like obama!
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by noloyalisti September 18, 2009 5:48 PM EDT
What's $1,761 a year to save out only planet? Besides, just repeal the Bush Crime Family tax cuts for the rich, close the offshore tax havens (for the rich), and stop bombing four countries for the rich (while the poor go and die) and we can pay for all of this. And health care to boot.
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by responsiblehuman September 18, 2009 4:15 PM EDT
Energy is going to cost Americans more money ?! Gee, maybe they will USE less ! The country freaked out when President Carter asked us to turn down our thermostats during the 70's energy crisis, and it took gas at $5 a gallon for people to get rid of their freakin gas-guzzling suv's! I know I made fewer unnecessary trips around town, and I already get 38 mpg. We Americans think it's our "God-given right" to rape and pillage the environment so we can leave every light on in the house and sit in the parking lot with our engines idling. I doubt that same God is very happy with what we've done to the planet. I WANT my energy costs to go up if it means more environmental regulation on the extraction, production and disposal. Nobody wants the federal government to regulate, but beside the fact that there really are no state boundaries when it comes to the environment, irresponsible behavior warrants an authority figure taking over. Children would run wild without parents setting limits. When we can grow up and behave like responsible humans . . .
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by Stevenapoli7 September 18, 2009 3:33 PM EDT
So I get increased expenses for what benefit. I doubt this will improve the g;bal warming situation seeing as africa, Asia, and south america pollute all they want.
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by Stevenapoli7 September 18, 2009 3:16 PM EDT
The tax and spend label sure suits Obama well.
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by sjc_1 September 30, 2009 5:03 PM EDT
The Borrow and Waste label suited Bush nicely.
by Stevenapoli7 September 18, 2009 3:15 PM EDT
Nuclear power has no carbon emissions by the way.
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by johnst1001a November 1, 2009 6:16 AM EST
This of course is simply not true. You do not consider the fuels used in mining, purifying, enriching, and the post use processes. You also do not include the huge use of fuels during the construction process.
by Stevenapoli7 September 18, 2009 3:05 PM EDT
Boy this is great news. All thos Co2-coal stuff is B.S. Every time a volcano erupts it spews more CO2 into the air than that produced over all of mankind's history
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by johnst1001a November 1, 2009 6:17 AM EST
Actually this is not true either. CO2 from man is 5x the emissions from nature.
by anti-global2 September 18, 2009 10:45 AM EDT
any American who supports this is a traitor. Look inot the details and see where the profits would go.
Part would go to decrease emissions. this would supposedly benifit everyone all over the world, so why would we Americans pay for it when it would benifit people in China and India who would not be taxed? Who cares if they are to poor to pay, until they can pay an equal amount Americans should not be expected to pay anything either.
Also part of the profits would go to aid developing countries. Why should Americans pay anything to aid other countries? Then they'll be in a position to use up resources we could be using, and chances are Americans would be indirectly paying for them to have those resources anyway.
The U.S. govt' needs to be looking for ways to increase the wealth and standard of living of all Americans and only Americans. Let everyone else fend for themselves. What have they done for us anyway? They were not part of the making of America, so they don't deserve to share the fruits.
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by responsiblehuman September 18, 2009 4:55 PM EDT
oh I'm sorry - we can't forget that this country was built by a bunch of rich white guys. Let's just seal the borders, put a dome over the whole country and choke on those power plant emissions that aren't really a problem.
by rdepontb September 18, 2009 6:40 AM EDT
Oh, pardon me, if any American should bother him or her self with such a quaint notion as global salvation. Just because we found a way to deplete the world's resources doesn't mean we have to worry about it---let the latecomers take it on the chin.

ON THE OTHER HAND, our space exploration seems to have benefited the planet's inhabitants, at least in terms of providing inspiration and a thermopedic mattress material. They do us something, don't they?

Oh---cap and trade started life under Cheney, didn't it? Wall Street bail out too. Iraq and Afghan "wars"---yep. So, no one post-Bush/Cheney can start any new program at all, since we and succeeding generations will be paying off earlier bills. What an evil man that makes of Obama. Really?
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by jackiemaxmcc September 18, 2009 1:37 AM EDT
agiraffedies : your post on how our tax system works is almost too good. i am still laughing, and yes it did clear up things for me. thank you so much!
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by vpcharan September 18, 2009 12:16 AM EDT
This is GOP fear mongering act III. To trust GOP John Boehner's analysis is like trusting the prophecy of Nostradamas. Recall what GOP was saying when the clinton administration raised taxes in 1993 without a single GOP vote in house or senate? The tax hike will cause recession, unemployment and business failures. In fact John Boehner was saying it would cause depression of 1930. What actually happened? The opposite. 20 million new jobs created, the budget deficit $280 billion was eliminated and replaced with $ 340 billion budget surplus in year 2000. We need cap and trade. We are talking about shaping the future.
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by ribbie149 September 17, 2009 11:02 PM EDT
Where were all you fiscal conservatives when Bush was pouring billions of dollars down the Iraq sinkhole (which we have nothing to show for) and giving tax cuts to the rich which created the largest deficits in the history of this nation? Bush presided over the collapse of the financial system and was responsible for the $762,000,000,000 TARP bailout with no adequate checks and balances placed on the loans. So if it's tax money used to actually DO something constructive it's bad because a Democratic president is supporting it. But if you are just THROWING THE MONEY AWAY (as Bush did in Iraq) it's just peachy. I hope all of you "fiscal conservatives" own beach property and remember your BS as the water rises.
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Declan McCullagh's iconoclastic take on politics, the economy, and individual rights. (Iconoclast: From Medieval Latin "iconoclastes," and from Middle Greek "eikonoklast's," meaning image destroyer.) Sample topics: economy, politics, interviews, free speech, property rights, gun rights, lessons in economics, individual rights, interviews, technology, features.

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