The growing ethanol industry provides a significant contribution to the American economy, creating new high-paying jobs., increasing market opportunities for farmers, generating additional household income and tax revenues, and stimulating capital investment.
Historic U.S. Fuel Ethanol Production
FACT: In 2007, the ethanol industry provided employment for 238,000 workers in all sectors of the U.S. economy, added $47.6 billion to the nation’s GDP, and put an additional
$12.3 billion into the pockets of American consumers.
The combination of increased GDP
and higher household income generated an estimated $4.6 billion in tax revenue for the
Federal government and nearly $3.6 billion of additional tax revenue for State and Local
governments.
Source: Contribution of the Ethanol Industry to the Economy of the United States
FACT: By increasing the demand for corn, and thus raising corn prices, ethanol helps to lower federal farm program costs.
In a January 2007 statement, the USDA Chief Economist stated
that farm program payments were expected to be reduced by some $6 billion due to the higher value of a bushel of corn.
FACT: Ethanol refineries serve as local economic power houses.
While the national economic impact of ethanol production is impressive, small and rural communities with ethanol facilities nearby see a much more dramatic economic boost. In 2007, an average 100 million gallon per year ethanol biorefinery provided the following economic benefits to the local economy:
Source: "Contribution of the Ethanol Industry to the Economy of the United States," LECG, LLC, Feb 2008.
FACT: The federal ethanol program generates revenue for the U.S. Treasury.
The federal ethanol incentive, which is available to gasoline marketers and oil companies (not ethanol producers) as an incentive to blend their gasoline with clean, domestic, renewable ethanol, is a cost-effective program. It actually returns more revenue to the U.S. Treasury than it costs, due to increased wages and taxes and reduced unemployment benefits and farm program payments, while at the same time holding down the price of gasoline and helping the American farmer.
According to agricultural economist John Urbanchuk, the ethanol industry more than paid for itself in 2007. The combination of increased GDP
and higher household income generated an estimated $4.6 billion in tax revenue for the
Federal government and nearly $3.6 billion of additional tax revenue for State and Local
governments. Assuming that all of the 6.5 billion gallons produced during 2007 were
marketed, the estimated cost of the two major Federal incentives in 2007, the VEETC and
ethanol Small Producer Credit, totaled $3.4 billion. Consequently, the ethanol industry
generated a surplus of $1.2 billion for the Federal treasury.
The federal ethanol program was established following the OPEC oil embargoes of the 1970s, which exposed our dangerous dependence on imported oil. As an alternative to petroleum, ethanol directly displaces imported oil and reduces tailpipe emissions while helping to bolster the domestic economy. Yet today we import more petroleum than ever before. With rising crude oil prices and increasing international instability, incentives for production and use of domestic ethanol are critical.
We have subsidized the oil industry substantially since the early 1900s, and continue to do so. In fact, according to the General Accounting Office in an October 2000 report, the oil industry has received over $130 billion in tax incentives just in the past 30 years - dwarfing the roughly $11 billion provided for renewable fuels. During this time, U.S. oil production has fallen while annual U.S. ethanol production has grown dramatically.(GAO/RCED-00-301R)