Journal of Public Economics
Vol. 95, Issue 9-10, Pages 1202-1212
October 2011
Abstract
In this paper, we provide new evidence regarding the pass-through of diesel and gasoline
taxes to prices, and how the estimated pass-through depends on a variety of supply conditions
including a measure of state residual supply elasticity, and refinery and inventory constraints.
In addition, we estimate the response of tax incidence to gasoline content regulations, which
complicate the supply chain by increasing product heterogeneity. We find that state gasoline and
diesel taxes are on average fully passed on to consumers. We also find that the pass-through
of diesel taxes is greater in settings where untaxed uses of diesel are more important, which
corresponds to times when residual supply is more elastic. We find that only half of the state
diesel tax is passed on to consumers when U.S. refinery capacity utilization is above 95 percent.
Gasoline taxes, on the other hand, are fully passed through regardless of season or capacity
utilization, indicating that a gas tax holiday would provide price relief to consumers. We find
that regional gasoline content regulations affect pass-through – we estimate tax pass-through is
22 percentage points lower in a state using two blends of gasoline than a state using one blend
of gasoline.
Citation
Marion, Justin, and Erich Muehlegger. "Fuel Tax Incidence and Supply Conditions." Journal of Public Economics 95.9-10 (October 2011): 1202-1212.