Gas Tax Holiday Is Just Another Silly Biden Gimmick
We are witnessing the greatest example of monetary mismanagement since Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression.

In calling for a three-month suspension of the 18.4-cent federal gasoline tax, President Biden once again has come up with a gimmick rather than a policy. Or, to think of it another way, his announcement today on the gas tax shows again that his policy is to end fossil fuels.
That means he is insisting on implementing his radical, climate change ideology instead of defending American energy security, or, for that matter, American national security.
The tax holiday is just silly. It has no chance of passing Congress. It will not reduce gasoline prices. And it does nothing, of course, to help energy companies increase fracking, or pipelining, or refining. It does nothing.
At best, a gas tax suspension with a 4 percent discount on the price, even assuming all of it is passed on to consumers, would lower the average price to $4.82 from $5. Applying standard price theory, the cheaper price might actually increase gas demand. And then the price at the pump would go back up.
The trick here, which eludes the Bidens, is to increase the supply of gasoline. He wonât do that because it would violate his extremist greenie policies.
Of course, heâd rather just blame Vladimir Putin being in Ukraine or continue his incredible recent attacks on American oil companies. Here;s Mr. Biden today concocting a truly stupid argument about the energy crisis: âSo for all those Republicans in Congress criticizing me today for high gas prices in America, are you now saying we were wrong to support Ukraine? Are you saying we were wrong to stand up to Putin? Are you saying that we would rather have lower gas prices in America and Putinâs iron fist in Europe?â
Of course, Mr. Bidenâs energy problems are completely self-inflicted. Donât take my word for it. Hereâs the Fed chairman, Jay Powell, after being asked whether the Ukraine war is driving inflation in America: âNo. Inflation was high before, certainly before the war in Ukraine broke out.â
By the way, if the gas tax holiday actually got through Congress, which it wonât, it would defund the highway fund for road safety and other infrastructure by up to $20 billion. That money has to be replaced.
Iâll bet at some point the socialists in the Democratic Party will propose an excess profits tax, such as the one recommended by Senator Wyden and endorsed by President Biden, that would add 21 percent to the current corporate tax of 21 percent, for a grand total of 42 percent â which would stifle all manner of oil and gas production, employment, investment, and expansion. Exactly the reverse of what any sensible person would hope for.
These are not sensible people, though. Now, I think real tax cuts to mitigate the coming recession would be an excellent idea. Like making the Trump tax cuts permanent, or moving toward flat tax reform and simplification. Couple that with a major deregulatory push â not only on energy, but on all business and industry.
Today, Mr. Powell told Congress that the increase in Fed rates in all likelihood would lead to recession. The best way to counter that recession is to slash taxes and regulations. So while the Fed operates on the money supply, fiscal policy would create new incentives to work, invest, and grow the economy.
Thatâs the prosperity plan.
Mr. Biden of course is completely opposed to this supply-side mix, and thatâs why weâre in so much trouble. The Fed wouldnât have to reduce demand so much if Congress would take steps to increase supply. Letâs not make this any harder than it needs to be.
Yet Mr. Biden is making it very hard for working people, who canât afford gas or groceries as they see their real wages dropping along with their retirement savings.
Incredibly, thereâs even talk of a new âBuild Back Smallerâ reconciliation bill that would include sizable social spending, along with large tax hikes. That would guarantee more inflation and a deeper recession.
The same Democrats who in March 2021 voted in the inflation with their $2 trillion spending package would now vote in recession with a $1.5 trillion tax hike. Plus more spending.
Itâs the greatest example of monetary mismanagement since Herbert Hoover and the Great Depression. Hang on just a little longer, though, because the cavalryâs coming.
From Mr. Kudlowâs broadcast on Fox Business News.