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Date: 2024-09-27 Page is: DBtxt001.php txt00024714
US INFLATION
US PRICE OF GAS ... JUNE 2022

U.S. Gas Prices Hit a New High: $5 a Gallon ... The unrelenting march higher continues as the average price touches a new milestone, according to AAA.


The national average price of gas set new highs in June.Credit...An Rong Xu for The New York Times

Original article: https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/11/business/energy-environment/gasoline-price.html
Peter Burgess COMMENTARY
There are three (3) numbers that give a core understanding of the state of an economy and any part of the economy. hey are 'cost', 'price' and 'value'.

Business owners are very concerned with 'profit' which is the difference between the aggregate of price and the aggregate of cost for the period.

'Inflation' happens when the 'price' goes up. 'Profits' also go up when the 'prices' go up, especially when the costs do not go up.

The following article is an easy read and interesting ... but is is annoying to me because it makes little or no reference to the role that corporate decision making is having on prices. Most reporters seem to be ignoring the role that corporate decisions about profit are having on inflation and putting all the blame on the Washington government and President Biden. To my mind this is wrong and a combination of lazy and incompetent on the part of the journalists and editors involved.

I have a background in engineering, economics and accountancy. I have followed the big trends in technology, politics and society all my adult life. Over time, I have become more and more annoyed by the role powerful investors have been having on the functioing of the global economy and the simplitic goal of more and more corporate profit year over year, and more and more investor wealth.

It annoys me that essentially all of modern technical productivity improvement over the past forty plus years has accrued to owners and investors and a rather small amount has improved the quality of life of most of us ... perhaps as much as 80% of the global population have a worse quality of life in 2023 than they did in 1983, forty years ago. To me, the cause of this is the widespread 'financialization' of the modern economy that has been the dominant policy choice in the West since Reagan and Thatcher ... very good the the 'top' but mot so good for the rest of us.

And high gas prices supercharged profits during 2022 ... but was never called out by the media with any clarity at all!
Peter Burgess
U.S. Gas Prices Hit a New High: $5 a Gallon

The unrelenting march higher continues as the average price touches a new milestone, according to AAA.


By Clifford Krauss and Marie Solis

June 11, 2022 (Accessed May 2023)

HOUSTON — Gasoline prices reached a grim milestone on Saturday, as the national average for regular gasoline reached $5 a gallon.

Summer gasoline is nearly always more expensive because demand for fuel takes off around Memorial Day weekend. But this year oil and refined fuel prices have risen to their highest levels in 14 years, due largely to the Russian invasion of Ukraine and resulting sanctions, and a rebound in energy use as the economy recovers from the coronavirus pandemic.

The national average price of gasoline on Saturday was $5.00, up 60 cents from a month ago. A year ago, gas sold for $3.08, according to the AAA motor club. The national average has been at its highest point since March, when it went above its previous record set in July 2008, when oil was trading at more than $133 a barrel. That was more than ten dollars above the current level without even accounting for inflation. Back then, the national average gasoline price was $4.11, or about $5.37 a gallon in today’s dollars.

The average price is above $4 a gallon in all states. In California, long one of the most expensive states in the country for fuel, the price exceeds $6 a gallon. States with the largest recent increases in gasoline prices include Michigan, Delaware, Maryland and Colorado.

Energy experts estimate that every penny increase in the price of gasoline costs Americans an extra $4 million a day.

“Strap on for a sizzling summer ride,” said Tom Kloza, global head of energy analysis at Oil Price Information Service. “The average consumer is going to pay $450 a month for their fuel needs and that compares to something barely over $100 in 2020 during the pandemic.”

The war in Ukraine has had the most direct effect on gas prices, as sanctions on Russia have pulled more than a million barrels of oil off global markets. Energy traders have also bid up oil prices in anticipation that Russian production and exports will fall further.

But many other factors have contributed to the rise in prices.

There isn’t enough capacity to refine oil into gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. Oil companies closed a handful of refineries in recent years, especially during the pandemic when demand plummeted. A few new refineries will open or expand over the next year, which could help.

But for now, analysts say that strong demand for gasoline is straining limited supplies and pushing prices higher as drivers hit the road after several waves of new Covid-19 variants kept them close to home. The easing of stringent pandemic lockdowns in China has also pushed up oil prices.

The high gas prices — along with the rising costs for other necessities like food and shelter — are a big problem for President Biden. Many political experts believe the Democrats could suffer losses in the November elections because voters are angry and frustrated about high inflation. A report on Friday showed that consumer prices reaccelerated in May, rising 8.6 percent from a year earlier, the fastest pace in more than 40 years.

Last week, as gas prices edged closer to the $5 threshold, Biden administration officials said that the president would travel to Saudi Arabia, one of the world’s largest oil producers, in an apparent bid to restore diplomatic relations and, crucially, to seek help with bringing down energy prices. He is also encouraging domestic producers to pump more oil, although big oil companies are reluctant to increase investments significantly, preferring to return profits to investors through dividends and share buybacks.

In the past, when oil companies produced more oil in response to high prices, they caused a glut, undercutting their profits.

Mr. Biden has little influence on gas prices, which are governed by global supply and demand. Experts say even Saudi Arabia is not in a position to quickly bring down prices because it does not have the ability to completely offset the expected decline in Russian production. The European Union last month agreed to ban most Russian oil by the end of the year.

In March, when Mr. Biden announced that the United States was banning Russian oil and natural gas, he warned Americans that “defending freedom is going to cost.” There is some evidence that the high prices are beginning to have an impact on demand. Travel experts say that some people are choosing to drive shorter distances on their vacations.

Eventually the high prices at the pump are likely to encourage motorists to switch to electric cars, but the purchases of such cars are expected to reduce demand over the coming years, not months.

“It takes a while for price increases to affect demand,” said Donald Hertzmark, president of DMP Resources, a Washington-based energy consulting firm. “Consumers have to believe the price increases are real and permanent, and there has to be some period of adjustment to substitution, conservation and demand destruction.”

Clifford Krauss reported from Houston and Marie Solis reported from New York.

Clifford Krauss is a national business correspondent based in Houston, covering energy. He has spent much of his career covering foreign affairs and was a winner of the Overseas Press Club Award for international environmental reporting in 2021. @ckrausss

A version of this article appears in print on June 12, 2022, Section A, Page 26 of the New York edition with the headline: Gas Prices Hit $5 a Gallon, A New High. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

The State of the War
  • Attacks in Russia: Anti-Kremlin fighters aligned with Ukraine are engaged in a rare cross-border assault in southern Russia. The fighters are said to have used at least three U.S.-made armored vehicles during the incursion.
  • Bakhmut: Russia’s claim of victory in the eastern Ukrainian city suggests that the deadliest battle of the war might be over. But what comes next is far from clear, and experts question the value of what Moscow has gained.
  • F-16s for Ukraine: In a sharp reversal, President Biden told allies that he would allow Ukrainian pilots to be trained on American-made F-16s, and is prepared to approve other countries’ transferring the jets to Ukraine.
  • Fending Off the West: As alarm grows in China that Western countries backing Ukraine are turning their attention to Asia, Beijing and Moscow are reinforcing their relationship by holding security and trade talks.
The Burden of High Fuel Prices
  • Biden Has ‘Only Bad Options’ for Bringing Down Oil Prices June 5, 2022
  • High California Gas Prices Rattle Democrats Ahead of Midterms June 6, 2022
  • OPEC Plus agrees to a bigger increase in oil supply. But prices keep rising. June 2, 2022
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The text being discussed is available at
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/11/business/energy-environment/gasoline-price.html
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