Over the last year, the price of gasoline has increased by close to 50 percent while the price of crude oil has only moved by about 5 percent. Some have argued that this difference in price increases is clear evidence of price gouging. What we can tell for sure is that the demand and supply for gasoline is extremely inelastic. Inelastic demand or supply states that production and consumption is insensitive to price. Gasoline has become a poster child for this type of market.
Demand has actually increased over the last year. There has been no cutback in driving by consumers. There has been an increase in the productivity of gasoline usage through purchasing of hybrid and fuel efficient cars but that has not translated into fewer barrels consumed. Hybrid cars are more expensive than normal combustion engines so the payback for a purchase is shortened when the price of gasoline increases, but the fuel savings for the economy will be minimal until there is significant replacement of the existing fleet of cars. In the short-run, there are few substitutes for driving. Consumers have to drive and they are not changing behavior.
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