Oil Tax for All

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BRITISH COLUMBIA, PRINCE GEORGE REFINERY, 1968 MEDALLION ---a
Creative Commons License photo credit: woody1778a
Michael Hiltzik, LA Times, writes (including a comment from Mason Gaffney):

The most persistent misconception about Californians is that we hate to raise taxes. The truth is that we adore raising taxes — as long as someone else is paying, that is.

So nonsmokers vote to raise cigarette taxes, teetotalers to raise liquor taxes. The middle and working classes want to hike taxes on the rich, who are happy to return the favor.

Yet this only compounds the mystery of why we’re so resistant to raising taxes on perhaps the biggest, fattest target of all: the oil industry.

At least twice since 1981 Californians have considered proposals to impose a so-called severance tax on oil — a levy on every barrel that drillers take out of the California ground. Both times they went down to defeat — most recently in a $150-million initiative campaign that set a new standard for obscenity in campaign finance, thanks to Chevron and its fellow oil companies. The 2006 defeat of Proposition 87, which would have steered the tax proceeds to alternative fuel programs, preserved California’s status as the only one of the 22 major oil states to give the industry a free ride. And we’re the third-biggest producer in the country.

How embarrassing is it for California to be hanging out there alone? That outstanding anti-tax crusader, Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin, in 2007 raised her state’s tax to 25% of the value of extracted oil and gas. Proposition 87 would have capped California’s levy at 6%. So even if it had passed, we’d still be suckers.

With the state’s fiscal disaster having concentrated the minds of political leaders as never before, the oil severance tax is back on the table in Sacramento. We can expect the oil industry to trot out the same arguments it employed to defeat the tax the last time, so to save time it might be helpful to deflate them now.

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Speed Renting next Tuesday

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speed09comfy_web

Winter Vibes – Right House?

As we snuggle up to our 4th blanket, scramble for our long johns and warm via that cuppa soup, we must ask ourselves, are we living with the best people?

Winter migration is still possible at next week’s free event – Speed Renting!

Leaseholders interview roomseekers for about 3 minutes, then we ring the bell and you get to chat to another possible house vibe aficionado.

This is the time to ask what their fave soup is? What is their favourite energy saving move (cheaper bills)? How comfy is their couch?

Make sure you register by visiting the website where you can choose your preferred time. This will help us match people with times.

We have moved to the inner north as this is where roomseekers are demanding places to live. The supply-side will follow.

We will be holding Speed Renting on the 4th Tuesday of the month, so book this into your thinking.

Venue: The Comfortable Chair, 98 Lygon St (north – not the main Lygon St restaurant area but further north where the hipsters hang).

The Gentrification Game film comp

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Announcing the 2009 I Want to Live Here film comp!

The theme this year is:

The Gentrification Game: The War on Creativity

Artists exist on the edge of the system. Wages are required to pay for basic living expenses such as rent and food. Time is required to be creative.

Cheap rent gives artists more time for their passion. This sees many creative communities develop on the periphery, often in rundown ghetto-like communities that are close to the city.

Unfortunately, land speculators know this.

How many times do we have to see an artistic community moved on from the community they create?

Chapel St central to Chapel Windsor, Brunswick St moved on to Gertrude St, then to High St, Northcote – now out of the city to Castlemaine?!!!

A few years after change agents set up the sort of community we should all aspire to, the fabric of the community is undone through it’s own success. Willingly. By our government’s policies.

Higher rents acts as a large paint brush, smothering a creative community with biege.

What are the economic forces behind this?
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Brumby’s Sprawl-athon Unravels

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laverton_land_bank_web

PLANS to contain Melbourne’s urban sprawl are “stone dead” and the city’s cherished green wedge zones are in danger, according to a leading planner who has worked closely with the State Government.

RMIT University Associate Professor Michael Buxton has slammed plans by Premier John Brumby to expand Melbourne’s urban areas by at least 23,000 hectares – mostly in green wedge areas.

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Karl Williams, editor of Progress comments:

Is it any surprise that our urban planning contained within the “Melbourne 2030” plans are again in disarray, with no clear government commitment to honour the plans which aimed to restrict Melbourne’s sprawl within its designated urban growth boundaries?

With a tax system that lets private interests collect the massive uplift in land values when rezoning is performed, our system of developer-fuelled lobbyocracy will continue to overturn government plans and promises.

Kinglake Rebuilds Post Bushfires

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DeBortoli wedding + Kinglake bushfire
Creative Commons License photo credit: avlxyz

Renegade Economists Podcast 92

As broadcast on the almighty 3CR on Wed June 3rd, 2009.
Subscribe to the podcast by searching in the Itunes Store for ‘Renegade Economists’

Rebuilding Post Bushfires: Daryl Taylor & Steb Fisher from the Kinglake community discuss issues effecting the bushfire ravaged community in this grass roots recovery operation. Radiothon next week – save your bikkies.

Show Notes

“Why (cant the) world’s resource be internationalized, since raw materials represented the world’s basic needs? They should belong to and serve everybody” Dwight D Eisenhower

Economic trickery of the week – $55m Insider Trading accusation on Merrill Lynch
OR IS IT –
Land Infrastructure Tax Concerns

Australia dodges recession – Chris Zappone
UPDATE Australia has dodged a recession, with data out today showing the economy expanded in the first three months of the year.

Gross domestic product for the March quarter grew a seasonally adjusted 0.4 per cent from the previous three months, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said, bouncing back from a revised 0.6 per cent decline in the final three months of last year.

Analysts had expected the Australian economy to have risen 0.2 per cent in the first quarter, with many revising their predictions to growth from a contraction after yesterday’s surprisingly good trade figures for the period.

Gavin Putland writes in the Recession we had to deny:

The bounce in employment in Apr.’09 probably represents a pull-forward of activity due to the anticipated expiry of the First Home Owners’ Boost — in which case the unexpected extension of the boost … will presumably spread the activity into the second half of the year. On account of this stimulus, positive GDP growth for Q2 of 2009 is not out of the question. But a contraction in Q1 looks inevitable.

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