Los Angeles Times writer Michael Hiltzik  recently posted an interesting article on how taxing California oil  drilling could be highly lucrative for the state’s struggling economy.  You can find a clip of his story below, or check out the full post here.
 
The most persistent misconception about  Californians is that we hate to raise taxes. The truth is that we adore  raising taxes—as long as someone else is paying, that is.
 
So nonsmokers vote to raise cigarette  taxes, teetotalers to raise liquor taxes. The middle and working classes  want to hike taxes on the rich, who are happy to return the favor.
 
Yet this only compounds the mystery of  why we're so resistant to raising taxes on perhaps the biggest, fattest  target of all: the oil industry.
At least twice since 1981 Californians  have considered proposals to impose a so-called severance tax on oil  -- a levy on every barrel that drillers take out of the California ground.  Both times they went down to defeat -- most recently in a $150-million  initiative campaign that set a new standard for obscenity in campaign  finance, thanks to Chevron and its fellow oil companies. The 2006 defeat  of Proposition 87, which would have steered the tax proceeds to alternative  fuel programs, preserved California's status as the only one of the  22 major oil states to give the industry a free ride. And we're the  third-biggest producer in the country.
How embarrassing is it for California  to be hanging out there alone? That outstanding anti-tax crusader, Alaska  Gov. Sarah Palin, in 2007 raised her state’s tax to 25% of the value  of extracted oil and gas. Proposition 87 would have capped California's  levy at 6%. So even if it had passed, we'd still be suckers.
 
With the state's fiscal disaster having  concentrated the minds of political leaders as never before, the oil  severance tax is back on the table in Sacramento. We can expect the  oil industry to trot out the same arguments it employed to defeat the  tax the last time, so to save time it might be helpful to deflate them  now.
At the current world benchmark price  of about $70, the 6% tax contemplated by Proposition 87 would have generated  more than $1 billion a year from that haul.
Consider some "what if" scenarios:  At last year's peak benchmark price of $130 for California crude, the  take would be nearly $2 billion. Palin's tax rate of 25% would generate  $4 billion at a $70 price and nearly $8 billion at the top.
 
An important aspect of the severance  tax is that we'd better collect it now, while there's still something  to tax. California oil production has declined steadily from its 1985  peak of 424 million barrels. Since 2002, according to federal statistics,  the state’s known reserves have been depleted to about 3.3 billion  barrels from more than 3.6 billion.
The severance tax might be offset by  reductions in property and corporate income taxes paid by oil companies.  But an analysis of Proposition 87 prepared in 2006 by the nonpartisan  Legislative Analyst's Office found that such offsets would amount to  a mere fraction of the severance tax, so the state would still come  out way ahead. 
