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Does the US government subsidize oil companies?
Everyone throws that out there, like it's a given, but I don't see any evidence of it. I'm not saying the government doesn't do it for sure, I'm just looking for evidence. i.e. how many dollars went to which company and when. Be specific. I'm asking about direct subsidies or specific tax breaks that aren't available to other industries.
And I'm not talking about military action in the middle east, either.
4 Answers
- hottotrot1_usaLv 78 years agoFavorite Answer
general overview:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petroleum_industry
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_oil_pol...
There are tax breaks for oil companies, but so far, I haven't found specific dollar amounts by company...
- HereticLv 78 years ago
No, subsidies are price supports. What government gives the oil companies are grants for exploration, research and development. These grants allow the oil companies to maintain investor profits without having to spend their own money.
- ?Lv 78 years ago
No direct subsidizes like they do to Agriculture but many special tax breaks are given just like they are to almost all industries
- RockHunterLv 78 years ago
Democrats like to spread that lie around, but avoid the fact that the government DOES subsidize so-called green corporations that contribute to Democrat candidates, like GE and Solyndra.