
For example, when real gas prices peaked in 1981, it took almost 12 minutes of work at the average hourly wage of $7.29 to purchase a gallon of gas at the retail price of $1.42. When real gas prices bottomed out in early 1992, it only took 4.15 minutes of work at the average hourly wage of $13.30 to purchase a gallon of gas at the average retail price of $0.92. By June 2008, when gas was selling for $4.05 per gallon, it took 13.5 minutes of work at the hourly wage of $18 to purchase a gallon of gas.
Now that the national average price of gas has fallen to $1.99 per gallon (data here), it only takes 6.5 minutes of work at the average hourly wage of $18.25 (estimated) to purchase a gallon of gas, the lowest real price of gas since February 2004 (when gas was $1.65 and the average wage was $15.54), and about 50% of the cost in the early 1980s. And now that the price of gas has fallen to as low as $1.39 per gallon at some Kansas City stations (data here), it only takes 4.57 minutes of work there to purchase a gallon of gas. The last time the average price of gas nationally was that low was February 2002, almost 7 years ago!
No comments:
Post a Comment