Las Vegas Review-Journal

US gas prices are now lower than a year ago

- By Isabella Simonetti

After months in which gasoline prices in the United States have been one of the most visible symbols of inflation, they have a new distinctio­n: Prices at the pump are now lower than they were a year ago.

The reversal of the price escalation that accompanie­d Russia’s invasion of Ukraine will ease pressure on U.S. consumers dealing with the high cost of other essentials.

The drop in gasoline prices was led by a decline in worldwide energy demand, which drove oil prices lower. The national average price for regular gasoline stood at $3.32 a gallon on Friday, according to AAA. A year ago, the average price at the pump was $3.34.

At their peak, gas prices were just over $5 a gallon in mid-june. The price of West Texas Intermedia­te crude oil, the U.S. benchmark that serves as the main driver of gas prices, on Friday remained at its lowest level of the year, below $72 per barrel for the second consecutiv­e day, after trading above $120 in June.

The drop is a political boon for the Biden administra­tion, which has been drawing down the nation’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve since the spring in an effort to keep prices contained.

Although gasoline prices have fallen from recent peaks, they are still higher than they were throughout the past several years. Along with elevated oil and natural gas prices, this has powered a series of record-breaking quarterly profits at energy companies like Exxon Mobil and Chevron. The net income of global oil and gas producers is set to double this year, to an “unpreceden­ted” $4 trillion, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in a recent report.

Falling gasoline prices might be welcome news for the Federal Reserve, too, as it tries to curb inflation by raising interest rates and slowing down the economy. Still, the economic implicatio­ns could be complicate­d. As consumers spend less on gasoline, they have more cash for other purchases.

“It’s good for households and it’s good for affordabil­ity,” said Beth Ann Bovino, the U.S. chief economist at the financial analysis firm S&P Global. “But at the same time the easing up of pricing pressure at the gas pump leaves more money to spend elsewhere, that might give a nearterm boost to inflation.

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