Gas prices hit an average of $5 per gallon for the first time last week
- The cost of crude oil is the biggest cost component of a gallon of gas and can skew the cost
- Changes in crude oil prices have an outsized impact on final gas prices
- Other major cost areas include refining, marketing and distribution, and taxes
- Most gas stations make very little, and they don't reap windfalls when prices go up
The cost of crude
- Supply/demand imbalances can lead to major swings in the price of oil
- A variety of domestic and international factors impact oil production
- The push for green energy has thwarted progress that the U.S. was making in energy independence and increasing supply
- There is also a monetary policy component to this
- If the US and EU had been leaning into more traditional sources of energy, the supply would be closer to parity with demand than it is today
Refining
- The process that turns the crude oil into gasoline, a variety of other products and components for products. Costs depend on the time of year and geography, based on laws that require different blends for different times of year.
- Input costs of items that may also be refined with gasoline can also impact this cost.
Distribution and Marketing
- Oil needs to get from its location to the refinery.
- Once the oil is processed into gasoline, it doesn't magically appear at the gas stations, either. All of the distribution related to getting gas to you is intricate and expensive.
- Increasing energy costs end up being a double whammy for you at the pump.
Taxes
- On average, 57 cents per gallon of gasoline goes to taxes.
- This high taxation is meant in part to discourage the use of high-value fuels such as ultra-high-sulphur fuels (e.g., diesel).
- In the US, the federal tax is constant at 18.4 cents a gallon while state and local taxes vary widely.
Are the oil companies and greed to blame?
- Oil companies work to supply you with gasoline, as well as other petroleum byproducts, regardless of the broader economic situation
- The supply/demand imbalance in the availability vs. need for traditional energy sources shows up elsewhere
- Price gouging isn't what we are seeing today
- Some may say that price controls are the answer
- They are never the answer
https://www.theblaze.com/op-ed/roth-gas-prices-explained?mibextid=oZ3e79
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