A big surprise on gas

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[COLOR=#333333! important]You may not believe it, but fuel is more affordable than it was during the early '60s.[/COLOR]
[COLOR=#999999! important]By Indur M. Goklany and Jerry Taylor
August 11, 2008 [/COLOR]

Barack Obama thinks the government should intervene on gas prices to "give families some relief," and last week called for releasing 70 million barrels of crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. John McCain proposes an end to the ban on offshore drilling and has pushed for a gas-tax holiday because "we need it, we need it very badly."

But both candidates and the public are evidently unaware of a basic fact: Gasoline is more affordable for American families now than it was in the days of the gas-guzzling muscle cars of the early 1960s. Prices are beginning to come down somewhat, but this was true even when the national average was at its summer peak.



Two-thirds of American voters say they think that the price of gas is "an extremely important political issue," and many believe that it will cause them "serious" financial hardship, according to a recent survey by the Associated Press and Yahoo.

Although it's true that the real (inflation-adjusted) and nominal (posted) prices of gasoline are higher than at any time since World War II, even at the recent peak national average of $4.11 a gallon (California's average Friday was $4.17), gasoline is still more affordable today than it was during the Kennedy administration. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke worries that increasing fuel prices might eat up so much disposable income that it flat-lines consumer spending and tanks the economy. But it's difficult to square that worry with what we call the "affordability index" -- the ratio of the average person's disposable income to the price of gasoline.

After studying the average yearly price of gasoline from 1949 to 2007, and assigning the number "1" to the ratio in 1960, we found today's prices comparable to what they were in 1960 (1.35 today to 1.00 in 1960, with a high of 3.32 in 1998). The higher the gasoline affordability index figure, the lower the price of gasoline relative to disposable income.


Consumer anger about rising fuel prices has taken a while to build because, until the last year or so, the increases could be shrugged off as natural year-to-year price variation. Moreover, pump prices still seemed relatively cheap given increases in personal wealth. Personal disposable income since 2000, for instance, has increased by an average of about $4,800 a person. Those very real increases in economic well-being reduced the pain of higher prices at the pump. People didn't notice that real gas prices were higher because the percentage of their income going to the gas station was at an all-time low until recently.

The bad news for politicians is that motorists are noticing now. We are bombarded with reminders, from nightly newscasts to front pages, that gas is more expensive now than it was in the late 1990s. Ask Americans the price of milk, bottled water or orange juice and many won't have a clue. But virtually every American of driving age sees the large signs proclaiming the price of gas at street corners every day, and has watched the dial on the gas pump tick up to $40, then $60 or higher as they fill their tanks. The bill is high, and it is drilled into our heads.

But perception is not reality where gas prices are concerned. By June of this year, disposable income had risen by an average of $1,627 per person over last year's figures, according to the Department of Commerce, while the average person's real expenditures on gasoline increased by about $490. Our incomes are still outpacing gasoline price increases. The problem is that our incomes aren't outpacing the increase in gas prices lumped together with increases in everything else -- air conditioning, food, etc. Our homes, meanwhile, are losing value.

But gasoline is more affordable than it was during the early 1960s, an era fondly remembered by many as halcyon days of cheap fuel and gas-guzzling American cars. We're overlooking that context because it's easier to remember 1998, when we saw the lowest inflation-adjusted gasoline prices in recorded history.

Politicians would do well to remember these historical facts, as well as consumer psychology, when discussing gas prices with voters. Failure to do both will likely result in a government eager to score political points with the electorate by doing exactly the wrong thing.

Indur Goklany is the author of "The Improving State of the World: Why We're Living Longer, Healthier, More Comfortable Lives on a Cleaner Planet." Jerry Taylor is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute.
 

Smell like "lemon juice and Pledge furniture clean
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Good idea by Obama wanting to help out the disenfrancised and middle class. If McCain gets into office then everybody better buy some KY and assume the position
 

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LMAO typical spin job. That asshole probably wrote something 7-8 years ago that also said that the $1 million average home price in Ca. was cheaper than it was in relationship to the 60s, so buying then was a "smart" thing to do. Especially with such "favorable" ineterest rates and "creative" loans the banks could offer even the most modest borrower.

Yea reports like these really have relevance in the real world. They take averages and medians where the curve is so off the mark that it isn't even in the same hemisphere and try to spin it as fact.
 

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I don't give a flying fuck if gas was more affordable now than in the 60s.

I care about the fact that it was $2, now it's $4 or $3.85 or whatever.
 

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Regular was approximately 25 cents a gallon when I was in high school. People would actually get gas money under their living room couch cushions in a pinch. Try that today. Give me a bucks worth of regular was a common sound heard at Full Service gas stations everywhere in my hometown..


wil..
 

I'll be in the Bar..With my head on the Bar
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"Personal disposable income since 2000, for instance, has increased by an average of about $4,800 a person"


"disposable income had risen by an average of $1,627 per person over last year's figures,"

1st off both of those are IMPOSSIBLE. GWB is President so we know nothing could have possibly gotten better since 2000, those are just flat out lies.

"Failure to do both will likely result in a government eager to score political points with the electorate by doing exactly the wrong thing."

Does this guy watch T.V. cus Obama has said that this exact quote will be his govts policy. He already stated he will do whatever he wants to make things "fair" regardless of whether it is wrong or right...That plays no part in an Obama policy discussion..
 

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Regular was approximately 25 cents a gallon when I was in high school. People would actually get gas money under their living room couch cushions in a pinch. Try that today. Give me a bucks worth of regular was a common sound heard at Full Service gas stations everywhere in my hometown..


wil..
It was about 85 when I was in high school 11 years ago.
 
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I don't give a flying fuck if gas was more affordable now than in the 60s.

I care about the fact that it was $2, now it's $4 or $3.85 or whatever.

The point that you're missing is the change in the prices of everything over the last 30-40 years due to inflation.
 

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it isn't how much gas costs now as much as how fast the prices rose....and how it would go up on a weekly basis.
 

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Commodity prices in general fall over time when measured against real purchasing power. It's been that way for few years now (like 10,000)
 

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Imho

The point that you're missing is the change in the prices of everything over the last 30-40 years due to inflation.<!-- / message -->


That is a valid point but gasoline is in a league of it's own. Take the cost of an ordinary loaf of sliced bread in 1960 and compare it to the price of the same item today and I can guarantee you it has not gone up 1600% - assuming gas was 25 cents a gallon in 1960 and $4.00 a gallon now. You can do the same comparision with many commidities.

The items that we are being robbed on now (among others) are things that we have to have like gasoline and medication. I know everyone also has to eat but food prices while no bargain are not going to decide who wins this next election unlike gasoline prices that may at least have a big say in who wins.


A pair of jeans in 1960 was probably 2 or 3 bucks, today at Walmart you can buy a pair for 10 bucks 3 or 4 times as much, unlike a gallon of regular..



wil.
 

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