- by New Deal democrat
Back in the “before” days, as in January, before the Iran war, I wrote about how low gas prices were actually a tailwind for the economy. Because since the start of the Millennium over 25 years ago, they had only been so low compared with average hourly wages on only 3 occasions: after the 2001 recession, late in the Great Recession, and during the COVID lockdowns. Put another way, it only took about 7 minutes of work to buy a gallon of gas. This leaves a lot left over for other consumption - just as it did at the end of the two non-COVID recessions.
Needless to say, that has changed. But by how much, really? On the one hand, as I’ve pointed out previously, on a percentage basis this is the biggest one-month spike in gas prices since the 1970s. We’ll find out just how badly that effected the CPI for March this coming Friday.
But how much of the “tailwind” has been taken away? That’s what the updated graph below, of the “real” cost of gas compared with average hourly nonsupervisory wages, shows:
The “size” of the spike is about equal to the 2005 Katrina spike, and less that the 2022 Ukraine invasion spike. But in relative terms, it has not come anywhere close to the 2008 spike that helped exacerbate the Great Recession, nor the Ukraine invasion spike. Nor, for that matter, what I used to call the “Oil Choke Collar” of the early 2010’s, when gas prices put a lid on the velocity of any expansion in the early years of the last recovery. In order to approach the level of those shocks, we would need to see gas prices of $5/gallon, at minimum.
The gas price information doesn’t go all the way back to the 1970’s, but the price of oil, specifically West Texas Crude, does. So here is the same graph, of oil prices relative to average hourly nonsupervisory wages, going all the way back to before the first oil shock:
Here you can see that just before the start of the Iran war, the “real” price of oil was equivalent to the levels it was at from 1986-99, when gas prices were not a consumer issue at all. The current spike has not taken us back up to the levels of either the first Gulf War spike of 1990 nor the second oil shock of 1979-80.
The bottom line here is that, although this price spike is enough to marginally change consumer behavior, it isn’t yet at the point where in the past it has created a sense of real privation (in 1974 the spike was accompanied by an embargo that resulted in gas rationing). That isn’t to say it couldn’t get there in another month or two. Although I won’t bother with a graph, according to GasBuddy the national average has risen as much as another $0.12 in April up to $4.11. To reiterate, my sense is that a real sense of privation isn’t likely to kick in unless gas prices reach $5/gallon.

