Comments on: Solar tax credit renewals get green light from Senate
As the Senate finally agrees to a deal, the solar energy industry can finally breathe a sigh of relief and celebrate--and for good reason: This is a big deal.
As the Senate finally agrees to a deal, the solar energy industry can finally breathe a sigh of relief and celebrate--and for good reason: This is a big deal.
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@ The author: Cool beans :)
As for the article, if the solar industry has to have special tax breaks in order to be viable, then the industry is not worth it. If it can't work on its own without government handouts, then shouldn't that tell you that the industry is not worth it? Successful people / industries are successful because they bring a product that is wanted and / or needed. If there is so much incentive and need to have everything go "green", then why can't the solar industry survive on its own like most every other industry?
I guess they can't afford to look for oil without taxpayer help.
As for "Big Oil", think about it. Everyone complains they make too much money. My mutual fund and most every pension plan invests in these companies. Their money is going to help me retire since the government is stealing my social security money for other pet projects. As to handouts for the oil industry, Exxon paid $32.36 BILLION in taxes for 2007. That is $32,360,000,000. That is just one company and does not include the federal gas tax we all pay. Now you tell me if they are getting the handouts or is it the government?
The big hurdle for years has been cheap oil. Now that Oil sells for at or around triple-digits per-barrel, it makes financial sense to get some Solar (or wind, or etc.) energy going. Before now, only hydro in limited circumstances was worth the costs - and even then only with huge initial gov't investments. Now it is just as cheap to install solar panels or wind turbines.
The market is pretty much taking care of itself in that way.
That said, the tax credits aren't handouts - tax credits are incentives (and tax cuts generally stimulate economic growth - which is why both parties are advertising them to the rafters this year, no?)
PS: The very first conservationist president (Theodore Roosevelt) was a Republican. ;) Nowadays, both parties will loudly proclaim to "care", but BOTH parties are instead interested in only two things: Power, and Wealth.
It's that kind of thinking that got us $9 trillion in debt. Every program and project costs a minimum of $1 billion. Doing a study about a study costs $1 billion. Oh, it's not REAL money. It's just debt.
- by shanedr September 24, 2008 12:21 PM PDT
- There is absolutely no need for tax credits for the oil industry. The oil industries profits are the envy of the business world, giving them tax credits is a punch in the gut to every taxpayer.
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- by Endbringer September 24, 2008 1:57 PM PDT
- You do know that the difference between profit and profit-margin, right? The profit-margin for the oil industry is average or even below-average at 8%. Then take a look at industries like the software industry and see how their profit-margins are in the teens and sometimes over 20%.
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(17 Comments)The real solution would be to implement the FairTax. There would be none of these types of bail-outs or unequal incentives. Our economy would boom like nothing before if the FairTax was passed.