Research Catalog

The extra mile : rethinking energy policy for automotive transportation

Title
The extra mile : rethinking energy policy for automotive transportation / Pietro S. Nivola, Robert W. Crandall.
Author
Nivola, Pietro S.
Publication
Washington, D.C. : The Brookings Institution ; New York : The Twentieth Century Fund Inc., 1995.

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextRequest in advance HD9502.U52 N58 1995Off-site

Holdings

Details

Additional Authors
Crandall, Robert W.
Description
xvi, 180 pages : illustrations; 24 cm
Summary
  • For the past twenty years, the primary goal of American energy policy has been to reduce the nation's reliance on oil, but, according to Pietro S. Nivola and Robert W. Crandall, policymakers have been going about it inefficiently in the transportation sector. They say the United States, rather than continuing to administer mileage mandates on motor vehicles, should raise the price of motor fuel to moderate consumption.
  • The authors find that an additional excise of twenty-five cents a gallon over the past nine years would have conserved at least as much oil as the existing policy of imposing gas mileage requirements for new passenger vehicles. And such a tax, they contend, would not be as detrimental to the economy as opponents fear, nor as regressive as they claim.
  • The authors examine the development of motor-fuel excises in Great Britain, France, Germany, Japan, and Canada, explaining the historical and political factors that have led to different national policy orientations.
  • Turning their attention back to the United States, Nivola and Crandall show how regulatory measures have fallen short of their goal and why political barriers to bolder taxation of gasoline remain formidable. They conclude by offering suggestions for new directions in U.S. policy at the federal, state, and local levels.
Subject
  • Energy consumption > Taxation > United States
  • Gasoline > Taxation > United States
  • Automobile industry and trade > Energy consumption > United States
Note
  • "A Twentieth Century Fund book."
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. 141-174) and index.
Contents
1. The Policy Problem -- 2. The CAFE Conundrum -- 3. The Fuel Tax Option -- 4. What Other Countries Do -- 5. The American Experience -- 6. New Directions -- App. A. Econometric Analysis of the CAFE Program -- App. B. The Effects of a Fuel Tax: Empirical Methodology and Results.
ISBN
  • 0815760922
  • 0815760914 (pbk.)
LCCN
94034675
OCLC
ocm31076684
Owning Institutions
Columbia University Libraries