Originally Posted by
stile99
There's a reason it's not being discussed, and that's because the numbers simply don't pay out. First, let's demolish the very very false assumption that sales tax pays for the roads, and demolish the claim that even if it did, it would cover the fuel tax of a 'regular' vehicle.
So you said you paid more than $15,000 over the price of a regular car, and suggest that the additional sales tax on that would cover fuel tax for 'many years'. Well, let's say 100% of that was tax. $15,000 is the number we're looking at. How many is 'many years'? The federal tax is 18.4 cents per gallon (not even considering states here, just the federal). So we're looking at just slightly over 800 gallons of fuel. Let's continue to give you the advantage and make it 1000.
1000 gallons of fuel. So how long does THAT last? The average MPG is a touch over 25, so let's say 30. So there we are, 30,000 miles.
You're saying your sales tax on $15,000 should cover the fuel tax on a regular car for many years, but it doesn't even outlast the tires. And that's with assuming the tax WAS the $15,000 and only counting the federal tax. Oklahoma, while the average citizen might disagree, is stupidly low on their fuel tax, only 4 states have lower. If we added the 17 cents per gallon for Oklahoma (technically, it's 16+1) that would make 35.4 the number we should be using. This cascades through the other calculations of course, it would cover about 425 gallons of fuel, again giving you the advantage say 500. Divided by the 30 MPG and we're now at 15,000 miles. Again, we're assuming you paid tax OF $15,000, not ON $15,000, and that this sales tax is a fuel tax, which it is not.
So when you say it likely fails to be acknowledged, that's because we don't acknowledge Nibiru destroying the Earth yesterday, and for the same reason. You then say " the 'culture' of EVs and EV drivers that they'd never use as much fuel as petro vehicles to even justify a comparable tax". Are you seriously suggesting EV owners will not drive their vehicles more than 15,000 miles?
Roads will still need to be paid for, regardless of the type of vehicle on them. The suggestion that you paid more sales tax so you should be immune to fuel tax is just mind-boggling. And then you say if we went to a per-mile tax, regular vehicles will pay more than electric, but this is penalizing technology. How, precisely, is paying less a penalty?
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