Just How Costly is Gas?

Author(s)Condliffe, Simon
Date Accessioned2006-07-18T19:02:59Z
Date Available2006-07-18T19:02:59Z
Publication Date2006-07-18T19:02:59Z
AbstractRecord gasoline prices are generating outrage from drivers, and will continue to be a policy issue. Nevertheless the evidence suggests that gasoline expenditures are, on average, a relatively small budget item. Historically, consumers spent more of their budgets on gas in the eighties than presently. Within the context of other consumer expenditures, consumers spend approximately fifty percent more of their budgets on dining out, and thirty-eight percent more on entertainment, than on gasoline and oil. However, as gas prices continue rise, gas expenditures may command an increasing share of total expenditures, and reduce discretionary expenditures on other items. Should the price of oil continue to rise, inflation-adjusted prices will close in on the record high of 1980.en
Extent168346 bytes
MIME typeapplication/pdf
URLhttp://udspace.udel.edu/handle/19716/2455
Languageen_US
Part of SeriesPolicy Issues;Summer 2006
KeywordsGasolineen
dc.subject.lcshGasoline -- Prices
dc.subject.lcshBudgets -- Personal
TitleJust How Costly is Gas?en
TypeArticleen
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