Giving an Inch and Keeping a Mile: Why the Corn Lobby Let the Ethanol Tax Credit Expire. Smith, A. Agricultural and Resource Economics Update, 2012.
Giving an Inch and Keeping a Mile: Why the Corn Lobby Let the Ethanol Tax Credit Expire [link]Paper  abstract   bibtex   
Ten percent of motor gasoline in the United States is comprised of ethanol produced from corn. This production level is required by law, a requirement that confers large benefits on corn producers by keeping corn demand and prices high. In comparison, the recently expired ethanol tax credit was a small perk.
@misc{smith2012giving,
  title={Giving an Inch and Keeping a Mile: Why the Corn Lobby Let the Ethanol Tax Credit Expire},
  author={Smith, Aaron},
  howpublished={Agricultural and Resource Economics Update},
  volume={15},
  number={5},
  pages={1-4},
	abstract={Ten percent of motor gasoline in the United States is comprised of ethanol produced from corn. This production level is required by law, a requirement that confers large benefits on corn producers by keeping corn demand and prices high. In comparison, the recently expired ethanol tax credit was a small perk.},
	url={https://giannini.ucop.edu/publications/are-update/issues/2012/15/5/giving-inch-and-keeping-m/},
  year={2012}
}

Downloads: 0