Posted on 04/27/2013 6:19:00 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
That was fast. After barely a work week of hours-long airport delays and missed international connections, both parties have slunk away from the $85 billion in across-the-board cuts that were lopping $637 million from the Federal Aviation Administrations budget. But wonks shouldnt forget the FAA cuts too quickly. President Obama has unwittingly made the best case for privatizing the nations aviation-control system since controllers went on strike 32 years ago.
Air passengers were outraged this week but they should have been doubly outraged. Unlike, say, Medicare, the FAA is supposed to be fully funded by the users of its services in other words, the amount that passengers pay for air travel is supposed to cover the cost of those services. Since 1970, Congress and the White House have funded the FAA through a panoply of direct and indirect user fees.
When you buy a domestic airline ticket, you pay 7.5 percent of the price to the FAA, plus $3.80 per flight segment, indexed to inflation. International flights cost $16.70 apiece, also indexed. If youre sending someone a gift via air freight, the carrier you choose will pay 6.25 percent of the cargo cost in FAA tax. And your airline really, you will pay a 4.3-cent-a-gallon tax on jet fuel. In 2012, all those dedicated taxes added up to $11.6 billion. Last year, these fees funded all but 29 percent of the FAAs operating and capital budgets. Considering that President Obama had to borrow 31 percent of last years general budget which relies on general taxes rather than user fees the FAA was more than holding its own. Plus, as the lobbying association for the airlines reminds the public, the FAA also serves private and military aircraft. In large part, Airlines for America notes, the general-fund subsidy supports the nonairline functions of the FAA. Finally, as the Government Accountability Office said in a 2011 report, since the Trust Funds creation in 1970, revenues have in the aggregate generally exceeded spending commitments from FAAs appropriations, resulting in a surplus.
Forty-three years ago, the Nixon administration created this self-funding aviation system for a good reason. As the New York Times wrote back then of Nixons plan to create the Airport and Airway Trust Fund, the distinctive virtue of any trust fund is that it relies on specific levies, normally user charges, instead of general revenues, and it replenishes itself automatically without annual appeals for Congressional appropriations. Precisely because trust funds guarantee stable income, . . . many Congressmen oppose them. Why? Dedicated funds are less susceptible to congressional diversion for other uses.
Or, at least, theyre supposed to be. Last week, the passengers who pay all of these fees saw that neither party had any compunction about taking their money and using it for other things, from Medicaid to defense. (By definition, because the FAA is running a smaller deficit than the rest of the government and because the FAA has its own sources of funding, that is the effect of an across-the-board budget cut.) When Congress finally capitulated, it wasnt out of principle, but because of public anger.
Last weeks mass inconvenience also showed how short-sighted both parties are. Consider: A reduction of slightly more than 5 percent in airline revenue for the year perfectly conceivable had Congress and the White House allowed the delays to persist would have entirely erased the supposed fiscal benefit of the FAA budget cuts. Both parties, in effect, showed that they were willing to raid an important part of the still-struggling private economy business and leisure travel not even to save any money but just to prove a political point. (Either that, or it showed they know nothing about basic economics.)
Voting members of the flying public as well as travel, tourism, airline, and business associations should take away a useful lesson from this mess. Both houses of Congress continue to dither on whats really eating the federal budget long-term. Medicare, for one, is taking smaller cuts than the rest of the economy. This noise without action means that the parts of the budget that really are vital to the private economy such as keeping planes in the air face increasing danger of encroachment from the rest of the budget. Do you want to pay your airline-ticket user fee to get, you know, actual air service, or do you want to pay the fee so that you can sit and wait for hours while your money goes to universal public pre-K?
Since dedicated user fees arent sacrosanct, maybe the airlines and air-travel associations should bring to the government a modest proposal: a real sequester. The airline industry could simply take the problem off the governments hands altogether, by privatizing much of the FAAs portfolio and the fees that pay for it (while requiring standard safety protocols).
Yes, privatization has its own problems but so does paying the government to fly and then getting for that money only political contempt.
Nicole Gelinas is a contributing editor to the Manhattan Institutes City Journal.
Take off and landing fees are used for pork just like our social security funds.
Likely have been since Day 1
Seems to me that the airlines should foot the bill for traffic controllers and airport security. If I don’t travel by air, why should I pay for this service ?
It would be run more economically and better of course but then there would be no place for the TSA union thugs to molest anyone.
Or...it would go bankrupt every five or ten years.
I think the government wants to stay firmly in control of the process.
There are no “cuts”.
There is no reason other than Obama’s political grandstanding for these FAA cuts. Obama is deliberately hurting the American public for cheap political points and that is despicable.
bump to the top
We don’t have kids why should we pay to educate other parents kids ?
That’s a different question.
For the same reason hubby and I pay out the wazoo in taxes to educate ungrateful, irresponsible future democrat voters in public schools when we have no kids.
Once upon a time, public education was designed to produce quality, participating members of our society.
What happened ?
In one word: unions.
“Seems to me that the airlines should foot the bill for traffic controllers and airport security. If I dont travel by air, why should I pay for this service ?”
I agree, although not specifically the airlines so much as anyone and everyone who uses the airport. (Including the military & private aviation) Every take off and landing needs to be charged a user fee.
Those fees should go to service the airport from which they were charged. That means smaller less used airports should either charge large rates to cover the overhead or reduce their overheads.
How would you collect those fees, especially at rural airports? Who would collect the fees?
Gas Taxes, landing fees, and parking fees.
Have you been to a small airport before? Even the ones that are not usual manned have infrastructure and were not exactly talking about a population(pioit) generally disposes to ignore or avoid such fees. Particularly ones that call theses airports home for their aircraft.
So i don’t see collection as being a serous problem even for the general aviation population.
“We dont have kids why should we pay to educate other parents kids ?”
Strictly speaking I don’t agree that you should.
Although it could be argued that :
1: You are paying for your own education.
This argument falls apart if you went to private school or were home-schooled.
2: You could also argue that you have a vested interest in seeing to it that other people’s children grow up with at least a basic enough understanding of free constitutional government as not to become a threat to your rights(and that Constitution) when they become voters.
Of course as the public schools have almost totally neglected theses lessons and as no such legitimate argument on that grounds could be made to justify you spending your money in their education.
Have I been to a small airport before? Yes. I am a charter pilot. I go to several airports every day. I do see collection and the bureaucracy required as a problem.
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