Abstract
Oil and gas production generates substantial revenue for state and local governments.
This report examines revenue from oil and gas production flowing to local governments
through four mechanisms: (i) state taxes or fees on oil and gas production; (ii) local
property taxes on oil and gas property; (iii) leasing of state-owned land; and (iv)
leasing of federally owned land. We examine every major oil- and gas-producing state
and find that the share of oil and gas production value allocated to and collected
by local governments ranges widely, from 0.5 percent to more than 9 percent due to
numerous policy differences among states. School districts and trust funds endowing
future school operations tend to see the highest share of revenue, followed by counties.
Municipalities and other local governments with more limited geographic boundaries
tend to receive smaller shares of oil and gas driven revenue. Some states utilize
grant programs to allocate revenue to where impacts from the industry are greatest.
Others send most revenue to state operating or trust funds, with little revenue earmarked
specifically for local governments.
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