Americans Are Paying $83 Per Week For Gas, A 335% Increase From 2002
Jul 9, 2008 9:35 AM, By American Coalition for Ethanol
Americans paid $1.13/gal. more to travel to their Fourth of July celebration than they did last year, and $2.60/gal. more than they did just five years ago, according to data from the Energy Information Administration.
“I think we’ve all become numb to constant gas price increases, but a look at the numbers should make people take notice. An average household pays $4,300 a year now for gasoline instead of the $1,200 they paid just five years ago,” said Ron Lamberty, Vice President / Market Development of the American Coalition for Ethanol (ACE). “Just six years ago, a twenty dollar bill would fill your tank for your Fourth of July holiday trip and you’d have enough left over to buy snacks, but today that same trip will cost you more than $60.”
“It’s sobering to realize that our dependence on foreign oil may even be threatening our celebration of Independence Day,” Lamberty said. “Ethanol’s opponents will tell you that the cost of the Fourth of July picnic is slightly higher this year, but the cost of the picnic is irrelevant if Americans can’t afford to drive to the celebration.”
While much recent media attention has focused on increased food prices, a look at the Consumer Price Index from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics shows that the gas price increase is by far the heavier burden for American households.
- In January 2002, an average household paid $102 a week for food (groceries and eating out) and $25 a week for gas.
- By June 1 of this year, a household paid $124 a week for food (an increase of 23.1%) and $83 a week for gas (an increase of 335.8%).
- If gas prices had increased at the same rate as food prices during that time, the pump price would be $1.39/gal.
“Ethanol is here today as a clean and cost-effective alternative to expensive oil. Increasing the availability of ethanol, and increasing the amount of ethanol in each gallon of gas, will continue moving the U.S. down the path to energy independence,” Lamberty said.
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