Weekly Updates
Weekly Updates
- One of the most visible oil prices is that of motor fuels. In almost every country, the price is predominantly displayed by the side of the road. In the US, the rise above USD 4 per US gallon in the average price of gasoline is presented as a national crisis. Of course, the relative prices of individual products constantly change with shifting supply and demand. In the US, a gallon of gasoline will buy approximately 20 eggs today—a year ago it would only have bought six eggs.
- In the UK, demand for motor fuel is around the same level as in 2015—down 3.5% from its pre-pandemic level. Some of this is fuel efficiency and electric vehicles, but Britons are also driving about 0.8% less than in 2019.
- In the US, motor fuel volumes are the equivalent of pre-pandemic levels and below those of 2015. It is a similar story in Germany and France.
- Changing behavior means that consumers can cut back on motor fuel consumption. Pricing is one factor that can feed into that process. The political desire to subsidize fuel, rather than allowing prices to push people to change their behavior (with governments offsetting hardship in other ways), needs to be considered in this context.
Stay up to date
Stay up to date
