 Beeper Part Of The Problem
join:2001-09-27 Dayton, OH clubs:
| reply to pnh102 Re: deregulation = price increases
said by pnh102 :Emphasis mine:said by Beeper :Check the price of air fare, long distance, and gas. Once they were regulated, now they are not. Today, they are far cheaper than before. These days, the price of gas isn't the best example of a price drop after deregulation Tis true, until you factor in inflation. When you do, today's gas is cheap. -- Guaranteed Fear and Loathing. Abandon all hope. Prepare for the Weirdness. Get familiar with Cannibalism. |
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  en102 Canadian, eh?
join:2001-01-26 Valencia, CA | Energy deregulation wasn't good for California (yeah Enron - we mean you!) |
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  pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| reply to Beeper said by Beeper :Tis true, until you factor in inflation. When you do, today's gas is cheap. I would be afraid to go there as well. Inflation isn't as low as many people think it is. -- Hey Fast Eddie... you're next! |
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  pnh102 Reptiles Are Cuddly And Pretty Premium join:2002-05-02 Mount Airy, MD
·Comcast
| reply to en102 said by en102 :Energy deregulation wasn't good for California (yeah Enron - we mean you!) Well technically it was not "deregulation." It was a re-regulation of the energy industry which was called "deregulation." Contrast this with Pennsylvania, which has had deregulated electrical service for quite some time, and along with it, a true drop in prices and a real choice in energy providers. Heck, our deregulated electrical grid was spared the worst of the Big Blackout of 2003  -- Hey Fast Eddie... you're next! |
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 Beeper Part Of The Problem
join:2001-09-27 Dayton, OH clubs:
1 edit | reply to pnh102 Try this for size. |
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  SRFireside
join:2001-01-19 Houston, TX
| Can't really factor inflation for gas as it is a commodity. Just look at the how that chart flies up and down. In 2003 when Bush said he wanted to invade Iraq gas prices were at about $1.30 where I lived. Two years later and the price has gone up 70%. There is no way you can say that's just the adjustment for inflation.
On top of that I remember gas being as low as $.75 per gallon back in 1998. That would mean the prices went up about 280% in just seven years. This has nothing to do with inflation. It's commodity pricing and goes by very different rules of economics. |
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 Beeper Part Of The Problem
join:2001-09-27 Dayton, OH clubs:
| I don't see it fly up and down, except when Ronald Reagan deregulated oil price controls. There was a sharp spike downward.
I see it sell in a fairly narrow band over a 20 year period. -- Guaranteed Fear and Loathing. Abandon all hope. Prepare for the Weirdness. Get familiar with Cannibalism. |
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  SRFireside
join:2001-01-19 Houston, TX
| Normally when you see items costs on an inflationary scale you see a steady rise and/or a steady decline based on production costs, demand, cost of living, etc. Here you see spikes and jumps of prices going up and down in an erratic pattern. Sure it looks like most of it stays between $1.25 and $1.60 per gallon over most the decade, but again on most markets you don't see such a continued flux.
I didn't start driving a car until around 1986 so I don't have any recollection of gas prices before then. Do remember gas prices being really low when I was driving. You'll have to fill me in on Reagan's price deregulation scenario. Not sure what that means and how he can have OPEC abide by them. |
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 Beeper Part Of The Problem
join:2001-09-27 Dayton, OH clubs:
| said by SRFireside : You'll have to fill me in on Reagan's price deregulation scenario. Not sure what that means and how he can have OPEC abide by them. The policy was to try to protect US consumers from high oil prices by setting the price of oil. The consequence was that no one had oil.
After Reagan deregulated, oil shortages disappeared and prices fell sharply. -- Guaranteed Fear and Loathing. Abandon all hope. Prepare for the Weirdness. Get familiar with Cannibalism. |
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