Posted on 05/17/2004 5:34:34 AM PDT by machman
Edited on 07/19/2004 2:14:12 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
May 17 (Bloomberg) -- President George W. Bush allowed an increase in oil refinery mergers to go unchecked since he took office and may have contributed to the highest gasoline prices in 20 years as the November election approaches.
The Bush administration approved 33 takeovers totaling $19.5 billion, on top of 21 deals worth $7.3 billion under President Bill Clinton, Bloomberg data shows. Reduced supplies were already pushing up gas prices in Clinton's term, according to a Federal Trade Commission study conducted after pump prices rose to more than $2 a gallon in Milwaukee and Chicago in 2000.
(Excerpt) Read more at bloomberg.com ...
Hey, I'm on a fixed income and would love to be able to buy one of the hybrids on the market. But I have an idea. This awful digestive problem creates lots of natural gas. Maybe someone could harness the power of the fart to propel my vehicle! ROFL
Most correct!
Would agree, but on the other hand, if Kerry is elected, it will be worse. Kerry will fight drilling tooth and nail. His solution will be to increase the tax on gas.
If you are truly a senior living on a "fixed income" that means you are retired. If the gas prices are affecting you so much, then just stop driving and stay at home. You can avoid the costs much easier than a non-retired person.
In addition, why wouldn't you have made investments when you were younger that accounted for all costs to increase with the same rate as inflation? Gas prices still have not risen to the levels that they should be if you take inflation into account.
Instead you post that the auto manufactures need to make vehicles with premium technology that are affordable to low or fixed income folks. Do you also want the government to grant seniors a "fuel subsidy", much like the drug subsidy?
It's gone up a lot more than 6-7 bucks in the last couple of years. Of course, the short term increase you are talking about is due to a lot of things, ranging from an increase in oil prices, to lack of refinery capacity, to higher wages, etc. I doubt that you can ID any mergers that have occurred in the last few weeks that might explain it.
The simple explanation is not found above - understand what's ahead :
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1131648/posts
When a $5 bill won't fill my motorcycle anymore, it's bad.
Count your blessings - I filled up yesterday on the north shore of Kauai and spent nearly $40 at a price of $2.49 per gallon for regular.
HERE in RENO GAS is $2.29 per gallon we always get hit, I sure would like to know why.
the auto manufacturers need to use improved technology so that cars can run efficiently... vehicles and energy sources [need] to be affordableRegardless, you're going to pay. When the technology breaks or needs maintenance, it's going to be much more expensive to fix or replace. It's going to be a nightmare for low-incoming families.
And forget about do-it-yourself auto-repair. Not without a lab with hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of electronic diagnostics equipment, thousands of pages of documentation and hundreds of hours of training, expensive specialized single-purpose tools, etc.
low-income.
"I have already previewed or do not wish to preview this composition" -- my worst idea ever.
I'm sure the fact that no refineries have been built in the U.S. since Nixon was president has nothing to do with the shortage...
The last new refinery was built in 1973, that's 31 years and many millions of SUVs ago.
Yup.
Not for long. It's past $2 for premium and regular is not too far behind.
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