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Federal Document Clearing House
Congressional Testimony
July 16, 2002 Tuesday
SECTION: CAPITOL HILL HEARING TESTIMONY
LENGTH: 3553 words
COMMITTEE:
HOUSE TRANSPORTATION AND INFRASTRUCTURE
SUBCOMMITTEE: HIGHWAYS AND TRANSIT
HEADLINE: FUEL TAXES AND HIGHWAY TRUST FUND
TESTIMONY-BY: THOMAS WALKER, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
AFFILIATION: WISCONSIN TRANSPORTATION BUILDERS
ASSOCIATION
BODY: Statement of Thomas Walker
Executive Director Wisconsin Transportation Builders Association
Motor
Fuel Tax Indexing In Wisconsin
Creating a Stable Revenue Base and
Continuous Revenue Growth to Maintain and then Increase Long- Term
Transportation Investment
Subcommittee on Highways and Transit Committee
on House Transportation and Infrastructure
July 16, 2002
Thank
you, Mr. Chairman. I am Tom Walker. I appreciate the opportunity to share with
you this morning the very positive contribution to Wisconsin transportation over
nearly 20 years from our adoption of motor fuel tax indexing. From several
positions in both the public and private sectors, I was privileged to play a key
role in conceptualizing indexing, advocating its passage, defending it from
misguided concerns, and enacting several changes to improve it.
Overview: Motor Fuel Tax Indexing
Wisconsin has historically
relied heavily on revenues from its motor fuel tax to fund a variety of
transportation investments. Since creation of the state's segregated
Transportation Fund in 1978, motor fuel tax dollars have accounted for
approximately 65% of state-generated transportation revenues. In fact, fuel
taxes (28.1 cents/gallon as of April 1, 2002) and vehicle registration fees
($
45 annually for cars/light trucks) account for more than 90%
of state user fees deposited into the fund that supports all transportation
modes - an extremely narrow revenue base that is unique nationally. The concept
of indexing Wisconsin's motor fuel tax rates evolved during a period of high
inflation and decreasing fuel consumption, a dangerous combination of factors in
a state whose transportation funding base rests largely on motor fuel revenues.
Implementation of motor fuel tax indexing in the mid-1980s stabilized this
critically important revenue source and maintained the purchasing power of those
state dollars through 1997. Combined with the increased federal commitment to
transportation in ISTEA and TEA-21 and a key 1997 change in its formula,
indexing has allowed Wisconsin to develop comprehensive, long-term plans and
fmancial commitments to improve its transportation system.
The initial
funding stability and later, sustained fuel tax revenue growth created by
indexed motor fuel tax rates provided Wisconsin's primary transportation revenue
source a similar inflationary adjustment that other General Fund taxes
automatically produce without legislated increases in their rates.
These
fuel tax increases almost certainly would not have occurred if our state
Legislature had been required to vote on "increasing fuel tax rates" during each
biennial budget. By comparison to Wisconsin, both Iowa and Minnesota's fuel tax
rates have been stuck at 20 cents per gallon for more than a decade, with major
negative consequences on the highway infrastructure in those states. The issue
is simply too hot, politically.
Background
Wisconsin's fuel tax
was created in 1925 at a rate of 2 cents per gallon. Since a segregated highway
fund was not created until 1945, the revenues generated from the fuel tax were
initially deposited in the state's General Fund. However, these receipts were
appropriated for the purpose of developing and maintaining highways. In fact,
the stated intent of establishing the new tax was to transfer the source of
funding for highway programs from the general taxpayer to the highway user.
Increases in the state fuel tax rate occurred very sporadically between
1925 and 1980. Motor fuel consumption grew at an annual rate of approximately 7%
from the mid-1960s to early 1970s, well above the rate of inflation. This
created a predictable source of revenue growth that allowed Wisconsin to keep
pace with highway needs. Even though the motor fuel tax rate (7 cents/gallon)
did not change during this period, increased fuel consumption provided revenue
growth - until 1973.
Wisconsin's period of disinvestment
In the
mid-1970s the supply and price of fuel were significantly impacted by
international events, prompting the country to impose Corporate Average Fuel
Economy (
CAFE) standards on its vehicle fleet. As a result of
greater fuel efficiency and public reaction to price spikes, fuel consumption
remained relatively flat while the nation struggled with double-digit inflation.
Fuel consumption began to increase again during the last half of the 1970s
before falling for four consecutive years in the early 1980s:
When
combined with the significant inflation of the 1970s and early 1980s, the
reduced fuel consumption resulted in a major reduction in the purchasing power
of the main component of Wisconsin's transportation revenue base. While
inflation caused the price of goods to skyrocket triple between 1966 and 1980,
there were no corresponding increases in highway user fees. As a consequence,
major portions of the state transportation system began to fall into disrepair.
Resources were not adequate to resurface the large percentage of roads
originally built in the 1960s; capacity improvements were non-existent and an
alarming number of state and local bridges were either structurally deficient or
functionally obsolete. The state Legislature responded to the growing
infrastructure crisis by enacting a series of increases in the motor fuel tax
rate - from 7 cents a gallon in 1980 to 16 cents a gallon by 1984. The 9-cent
increase in the fuel tax over a fouryear period surpassed the 7-cent increase
that had occurred over the previous 55 years. Suddenly, fuel tax rates had
become a persistent legislative issue that forced tough votes, nearly always in
a crisis environment, just to maintain funding for existing transportation
programs. Political leaders began to realize that indexing motor fuel tax rates
was the only way to provide the type of constantdollar revenue stream that was
naturally generated by income and sales taxes.
Democratic Governor
implements indexing
In 1983, Democratic Gov. Anthony Earl seized upon a
recommendation of a Blue Ribbon Commission on Long-Range Transportation
Financing, created by his Republican predecessor, and proposed a system of motor
fuel tax indexing in Wisconsin. The initiative was viewed as a long-term
solution to the state's transportation funding needs that would prevent the
dramatic declines in the purchasing power of revenues that resulted in a
significant deterioration of the system in the 1970s and early 1980s. It would
enable current programs to keep even with inflation and declining fuel
consumption, while still subjecting proposals for real program growth to
legislative debate. The state's diverse transportation interest groups - most of
whose programs rely on fuel tax revenues - largely supported the measure and it
was passed by a Democratic Legislature.
According to Chapter 78.015 of
the Wisconsin State Statutes, indexing became effective on April 1, 1985:
78.015 Annual adjustment of tax rate. (1) Beginning in 1985, on or
before April 1 the department shall recompute and publish the rate for the tax
imposed under s. 78.01 (1) and the rate under s. 78.14. The new rate per gallon
shall be calculated by multiplying the rate in effect at the time of the
calculation by an amount obtained by multiplying the amount under sub. (2) by
the amount under sub. (3).
(2) Divide the highway maintenance cost
index, as computed by the federal department of transportation, federal highway
administration, for the year prior to the year during which the calculation is
made by that index for the year that is 2 years prior to the year during which
the calculation is made.
(3) Divide the number of gallons of motor fuel
and special fuel sold in this state, as estimated by the department, during the
year 2 years prior to the year during which the calculation is made minus any
shrinkage allowed by the department by the number obtained by subtracting from
the number of gallons of motor fuel and special fuel sold in this state, as
estimated by the department, during the year prior to the year during which the
calculation is made minus any shrinkage allowed by the department.
(4)
The rate calculated under this section shall be rounded to the nearest 0.1 cent.
Initial formula included two factors
As originally approved and
signed into law, indexing was intended to maintain the buying power of motor
fuel revenues through two factors. A road-related Highway Maintenance Cost
Index*, calculated by the Federal Highway Administration, was used to determine
the annual inflationary adjustment to the fuel tax rate. A separate fuel
consumption factor was used to counterbalance the cost index so that decreased
fuel usage would create upward pressure on the annual adjustment. These two
factors, explained in the formula below, helped maintain the purchasing power of
fuel tax revenues:
* The Highway Maintenance Cost Index was replaced in
1991 by the Consumer Price IndexUrban because FHWA was no longer committed to
providing annual updates to accommodate Wisconsin's April 1 indexing adjustment
schedule.
Republican Governor's veto maintains indexing
Rep.
Tommy G. Thompson was among the rural Republicans whose support was critical in
the implementation of indexing in 1983. Economic development opportunities
created by increased transportation investment became a cornerstone of his 1986
successful gubernatorial campaign. That resolve was quickly tested in his first
state budget as governor when a Democraticcontrolled Legislature approved his
request for a 2- cent increase in the base motor fuel tax rate, but also sought
the repeal of indexing. Gov. Thompson used his line-item veto power to strike
the repeal of indexing (while retaining the 2- cent increase in the base tax
rate), defeating the only serious challenge to indexing in Wisconsin since its
inception.
Throughout his administration, Gov. Thompson continued to
support indexing not only as a way to maintain, but also increase, the buying
power of fuel tax revenues to keep pace with unprecedented travel demands
(vehicle miles of travel in Wisconsin grew 29% during the 1990s) fueled by a
robust economy.
During the same period, Gov. Thompson lobbied the
Legislature to increase other state funding to address the significant backlog
of highway capacity needs. In 1991, he proposed and the Legislature approved
increased vehicle registration fees to fund the governor's Corridors 2020
highway and economic development initiative. This network of two- and multi-lane
highways connecting regions of the state with each other and national markets
would later become a model for development of the National Highway System.
Without indexing, those increases in vehicle registration fees would
have merely replaced some of the lost buying power of the fuel tax, due to
buying power erosion from inflation.
In 1997, he followed a
recommendation of his Transportation Finance Study Committee to remove from the
indexing formula the fuel consumption factor, which limited increases in the
fuel tax rate as fuel consumption increased in the 1990s. This, in essence,
shifted the focus of indexing from the fuel tax yield to the fuel tax rate. As a
result, constant dollar fuel tax revenues now grow and help provide some
additional funding to meet the needs created by increased traffic levels.
The governor also pushed for increased transportation investment in 1997
through a 1-cent increase in the base motor fuel tax and modest increases in
vehicle registration fees.
Bi-partisan support for motor fuel tax
indexing
There continues to be strong, bipartisan support for motor fuel
tax indexing in Wisconsin's Legislature. Opposition comes mainly from a small
group of legislators that philosophically objects to additional highway lanes
and sees transportation revenue growth as allowing that to continue. However,
construction of additional highway capacity represents less than 10% of annual
state transportation spending, and most legislative attempts to repeal indexing
are seldom afforded a committee hearing.
An annual debate on indexing
usually focuses on whether motor fuel tax rates should increase without a vote
of the Legislature. Neither sales nor income tax rates are increased without
political scrutiny and it is undemocratic to provide automatic increases in fuel
tax revenues, critics contend.
However, income and sales tax revenues
are generated much differently than fuel tax revenues. Income and sales tax
revenues grow naturally (at least) at the rate of inflation because they are
tied to earnings and the price of goods and services. In a strong economy, this
natural growth that occurs without a legislative vote can be used to expand
state investments. By comparison, fixed fees such as the motor fuel tax must be
regularly increased or the programs they fund will stagnate.
In
Wisconsin during the 1990s, income and sales tax revenues grew 72% and 78%,
respectively, without any changes in the tax rate or a vote of the Legislature.
In fact, the Legislature voted to decrease income tax rates during the decade.
During the same period, motor fuel tax revenues grew only 50% despite repeated
annual increases in the fuel tax rate due to indexing and a onecent per gallon
increase in the base fuel tax rate in 1997.
Which tax is the automatic
one? Clearly, fuel tax indexing has a much smaller impact on taxpayers than the
internal tax growth generated by sales and income taxes. Without doubt, fuel tax
indexing is clearly not "out-of-control" taxation.
Motor Fuel
That 15% constant dollar revenue increase might not seem like much, but
it should be compared to the 30% decrease in buying power experienced in states
without indexing or legislated fuel tax increases. That's a gap of 45%.
It's critical to recall that when indexing included a fuel consumption
factor, constant dollar growth could not occur. The goal was simply to maintain
buying power from the motor fuel tax. However, starting with the 1998
adjustment, the goal was constant dollar growth. The entire 15% in real growth
from 1991 to 2001 occurred in the last three and one-quarter years. Indexing the
fuel tax rate just to inflation has dramatically proven itself!
Benefits
of funding predictability
It is this funding stability that has allowed
Wisconsin to cost- effectively manage its transportation system over multiple
years. With its base secure in an inflation-adjusted funding stream, Wisconsin
has been able to avoid the additional costs that result from deferred projects
and has developed an effective performance- based pavement and bridge management
systems that choose optimal investment at the right time.
Coupled with a
significant increase in the federal government's commitment to transportation
through ISTEA and TEA-21, the stable revenue growth created by motor fuel tax
indexing has helped Wisconsin considerably rebuild its transportation system.
Since it was implemented in the mid-1980s, indexing has provided a consistent
and dependable stream of revenue that allowed the state to address a significant
backlog of highway and bridge deficiencies while continuing to rely almost
solely on highway user fees to invest in all transportation modes.
Today's 28.2 cents per gallon motor fuel tax is 9.2 cents per gallon
higher than it probably would be today, had Wisconsin relied only on legislated
fuel taxes. From a taxpayer perspective, the annual increases have been modest,
and no more than the rate of inflation. However, from a transportation system
perspective, Wisconsin now has about $
300 million more in
annual revenues to spend on transportation investment. To put that in
perspective, in FY 2001, Wisconsin received $
549 million in
Highway Account obligation authority, including RABA and High Priority Projects.
Without doubt, indexing has been extremely successful.
Future Wisconsin
transportation needs
Wisconsin's transportation system is now at a
crossroads.
As with many other states, Wisconsin is facing a very large
bill to replace and modernize aging and obsolete parts of its system. The
25-year cost to upgrade the SE Wisconsin Freeway System alone is estimated at
about $
7 billion, while only $
46 million
dollars a year is now available. Wisconsin needs to increase its annual
investment in additional lane capacity on key routes by about 25%, as we face
continuing travel growth, including a doubling of truck traffic. Additional
funding will be needed to pay our match to develop a Midwest High Speed Rail
System, and help the Madison and Milwaukee metro areas implement new fixed
transit guideway proposals. Local roads, particularly those in urban areas, face
major rehabilitation costs.
While indexing has and will continue to
help, it is clear that major new sources of state funding will be required soon.
There has been serious discussion about indexing vehicle registration
fees to maintain the purchasing power of these dollars, which represent the
second-largest source of state transportation revenues. It has also been
suggested that a second factor, measuring growth in travel, be added to the fuel
tax indexing formula to better reflect the increased demands being placed on the
system.
Other ideas are under discussion as well. These include a value-
based registration fee and a phased transfer of the sales tax on motor vehicles
from our state's General Fund to the Transportation Fund.
Meeting the
challenge of funding a modern, muti-modal transportation system in Wisconsin
can't be achieved solely through state actions. But we must do our part.
Therefore, it is absolutely critical that our federal partner help as
well, by making available significant additional funding for state and local
highways, for high-speed rail, and for transit system development.
Recommendations for Congress
As Congress debates various
financing options to meet the nation's transportation needs in the next
reauthorization legislation, the Wisconsin Transportation Builders Association
(WTBA) offers six recommendations for your consideration:
1. Assess
progress in meeting national needs by setting a long- term baseline target for
transportation investment levels. A number of organizations have already issued
recommendations for transportation investments during the next bill. WTBA's
national affiliate, the American Road and Transportation Builders Association,
has evaluated US DOT system condition and performance data and concluded that no
less than a $
50 billion annual highway program is needed. From
ARTBA's and other proposals that will emerge over the next year, Congress should
first agree on a baseline target for meeting the nation's annual transportation
needs.
2. Once a long-term baseline investment target has been
established, it should be calculated in 2003 dollars and compared to projected
FY 2002 funding, also in 2003 constant dollars. Success should be measured in
terms of constant dollar program growth toward the goal, not actual dollars.
Using constant dollars will enable Congress to measure real growth possible for
system improvements, over the life of the next bill.
3. Index the
federal motor fuel tax rate to the Consumer Price Index and credit the
additional revenues toward meeting the long- term baseline investment target.
This will help ensure the federal government's primary means of funding
transportation keeps pace with the effects of inflation and exceeds it to the
extent that fuel usage grows.
4. In addition to inflation, index the
federal motor fuel tax to an index that measures vehicle miles of travel. This
mechanism, which would ensure that fuel tax revenues grow in proportion to the
demands placed on the system by increased travel, will be especially significant
as fuel cells and other energy sources begin to reduce the historic growth in
fuel consumption.
5. Make critical reforms to the Highway Trust Fund.
Balances should earn interest. The transfer of 2.5 cents per gallon of ethanol
sales from the Highway Account to the General Fund should be terminated. The
Highway Account of the Highway Trust Fund should be reimbursed dollar for dollar
for revenues lost due to ethanol tax exemptions, OR, the exemptions should be
terminated as unneeded if Congress passes a mandate for ethanol use in the
energy bill.
6. Bridge the remaining constant dollar gap between revised
revenue forecasts from the above actions and the long-term baseline investment
level with other increases in fees as necessary. As in Wisconsin, indexing does
not preclude a legislated increase in the base motor fuel tax rate.
Conclusion
Let me thank the Committee for its historic
leadership role in meeting the nation's transportation needs and congratulate
you for your diligence in thinking through what the next bill should contain and
how it should be funded. We in Wisconsin are most appreciative of the strong
federal program growth in the last two bills.
Stagnant federal fuel tax
rates will severely limit what you can recommend. We believe that Wisconsin's
political foresight by enacting indexing in 1983 has proven itself over nearly
20 years. We hope this committee will incorporate indexing provisions as one
element of a revenue package in the next bill. I'm confident you will be pleased
with the results.
LOAD-DATE: July 16, 2002