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U.S. Senate finance chair to propose tax on excess oil profits

Published 06/14/2022, 01:56 PM
Updated 06/14/2022, 05:30 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) speaks during the Senate Finance Committee hearing on the nomination of Chris Magnus to be the next U.S. Customs and Border Protection commissioner, in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington,

By David Shepardson

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Senate Finance Committee chair Ron Wyden is planning to introduce legislation setting a 21% surtax on oil company profits considered excessive, an aide for the senator told Reuters.

The bill applies a 21% additional tax on the excess profits of oil and gas companies with more than $1 billion in annual revenue, the aide said. The 21% tax would be in addition to any regular income tax due. Profits over 10% would be considered excessive under the bill, according to the aide.

Unlike other proposed windfall profit taxes, the aide said, Wyden's bill would apply the tax based on profit margins, not oil prices.

"While Americans pay more to fill up their gas tanks, Big Oil companies are raking in record profits, rewarding their CEOs and wealthy shareholders with massive stock buybacks, and using special loopholes in the tax code to pay next to nothing in taxes," Wyden, a Democrat, said in a statement.

The American Petroleum Institute, the top U.S. oil lobby organization, said "policymakers should be focused on increasing energy supply and reducing costs for Americans. Imposing new taxes on our industry will do the exact opposite and only discourage investment at a time when it's needed most."

President Joe Biden on Friday accused the U.S. oil industry, and Exxon Mobil Corp (NYSE:XOM) in particular, of capitalizing on a supply shortage to fatten profits after a report showed inflation surging to a new 40-year record.

In May, the U.S. House passed a bill that would allow Biden to issue an energy emergency declaration, making it unlawful for companies to excessively increase gasoline and home fuel prices.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) speaks during the Senate Finance Committee hearing on the nomination of Chris Magnus to be the next U.S. Customs and Border Protection commissioner, in the Dirksen Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC, U.S., October 19, 2021. Mandel Ngan/Pool via REUTERS

The Senate, evenly divided at 50 members in each party, needs 60 votes -- including 10 Republicans -- to pass most legislation.

Bloomberg first reported the planned legislation.

Latest comments

So funny watching all the mind cucked right wingers blame biden for everything. Is he useless and do nothing or destroying america with deliberate competent aim? Make up your minds!
Fun watching them increase taxes during a recession. Wheeee!!!
Gee thanks Biden, whole market is going in flames. Energy sector snapped back. Amazing hault keystone, increase overseas while shutting down production here. However, o no let's blame oil companies for charging more to import, on something Biden created. what a freaking joke he is. They do this we're looking at a bad recession. Oil goes so does the whole market. It is the only industry keeping things afloat.
Oh everything is biden fault?? Lmao all the refineries shuttered during orange cheeto blog years. Youre a big simp to authority though right so u just worship ur trump daddy lol so sad and brainless
stupid the democratic all they can do is tax tax tax
More taxes on top of giving away 2 trillion? Dems are clueless
Up Next: "Panicky Dems introduce bill to force supermarkets to give away free food."
Increase rates (do nothing, let the Fed work).Their debt becomes tougher to pay. There. Taxed.
Haha. so they will drill even less. have fun with high as prices forever.
Great liberal answer. Tax it and it will go away.
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