I know that gas prices are high and people are complaining, but it seems that consumption still hasn't gone down.So, how high before people REALLY start doing crazy shit about gas prices?How high before you'd sell your current vehicle for a hybrid?How high before you'd seriously consider biking to work instead of driving?For myself, approaching $5/gal is when I'd start really thinking about getting a hybrid. And then once it reaches the $7/gal range I'd start looking at public transportation or bicycle options.
5/20/2007 2:41:42 PM
This couldn't go in the other thread?
5/20/2007 2:42:56 PM
No.
5/20/2007 2:43:37 PM
Oh, well in that case I'll answer here.
5/20/2007 2:44:55 PM
It's already happening. Gas consumption hasn't dropped, but the growth in travel is down and thus growth in fuel consumption is also down.i.e. consumption hasn't dropped, but it's not growing like it used to.
5/20/2007 2:46:03 PM
I would seriously consider getting a new vehicle at about $5 for the simple reason that I drive very little. I would consider getting a plug-in hybrid in about the $7 range.
5/20/2007 2:55:25 PM
bout tree fiddy
5/20/2007 3:23:04 PM
1.85
5/20/2007 4:04:12 PM
one dollar, bob
5/20/2007 4:40:30 PM
large numbers of people are still buying large SUVs, so apparently we're nowhere near "too high" yet.
5/20/2007 5:09:00 PM
$10.00/gal
5/20/2007 5:56:15 PM
I think this fuel market is being propped up by all the equity loans people took out on their homes after the real estate boom.
5/20/2007 6:54:20 PM
4 dorra and I bike to work.
5/20/2007 7:52:46 PM
i already got a car with better gas mileage due to the increase (was driving an suv)...if i end up paying >$50 to fill up this car (which is almost to where I got when gas prices were at their highest last year and said "enough") then I'll start doing something else
5/20/2007 7:54:26 PM
^^i seriously doubt it.i think people would still drive at $6 a gallon
5/20/2007 8:08:35 PM
When it gets to 6 or 7 bucks a gallon, I'll cut back on unnecessary trips, maybe buy a motorcycle. To really, really change how I drive, 10-15 a gallon will have to be the norm. I don 't see that anytime soon.
5/20/2007 8:20:05 PM
^ if gas gets anywhere near that level, the decisions will be made for you as allowing such an oppressive market condition would destroy our economy. [Edited on May 20, 2007 at 8:35 PM. Reason : .]
5/20/2007 8:34:31 PM
lots of things will destroy the economy, like my political science paper i wrote two years ago. Says so right on the paper. Got a C- on it, not bad for something that would ruin the economy.Fuel getting to 10 bucks a gallon is about as likely as a foreign military invasion of America
5/20/2007 8:48:52 PM
5/20/2007 9:06:30 PM
I would drive at $6/gallon since the company I'm working for is covering my travel expenses. As for going to work I would probably try to bike since it is a short ride down to where I'm going, and I could take side roads with less traffic so I don't get killed.If gas hits $5/gallon I am seriously going to consider getting another car. If there is a gas shortage this summer and I ever get stranded anywhere, I will probably get a different car. I don't have a lot of money when it comes to this kind of stuff, but I would make a change to keep gasoline as a lower percentage of my yearly budget (it's about 12% right now, and I don't want it higher than 15%).
5/20/2007 9:22:49 PM
In addition to reconsidering their vehicles, I'd hope many people would reconsider the distance of their commutes
5/20/2007 9:26:36 PM
because that is really easy to do
5/20/2007 9:27:58 PM
Well, I bought a electric bicycle that makes most short trips (to school and back, beer runs, bite to eat) about as easy as taking a car. Hell, its quicker than waiting on the bus or finding parking on campus. I hope people start to pick it up. No gas needed. I guess you would say its a beginning.I wouldn't mind having an electric motorcycle like this guy built. Check it out, the thing moves. Guess the only annoying thing about it is without a motor to make all the noise, you can hear the chain clatter fairly well. [Edited on May 20, 2007 at 9:45 PM. Reason : .]
5/20/2007 9:38:28 PM
5/20/2007 9:42:45 PM
5/20/2007 10:18:14 PM
^^I think finding a place is the hard part.Like, let's say that for some reason I find a job as a teacher at a really nice school. I wouldn't take it, but if for some reason I did, I probably wouldn't be able to afford to live near the school.If the school allowed me to set up a cot in the classroom, swear to God, I'd do it in a heart beat and live right where I work. That's a dream of mine, but anyway...
5/20/2007 10:41:22 PM
my sister just got back from Qatar......where gas is 20 cents per gallon.I guess its great when oil is your main export
5/20/2007 10:43:34 PM
This will tell you:
5/20/2007 10:43:41 PM
^^^ I'm calling it-- 15 days on the job until you're disillusioned.[Edited on May 20, 2007 at 10:45 PM. Reason : .]
5/20/2007 10:44:55 PM
^^How about when supply and demand are both inelastic? Like in this case?You can go ahead and throw out that graph.
5/20/2007 10:55:36 PM
^^I'm already disillusioned.I have all these fantastic ideas about how the world would work if we just did everything my way, and when people fuck it up, I get so pissed off. Like, when a young, well-educated, smart girl who knows about birth control gets pregnant, I'm thinking to myself, "WTF is wrong with you?!?!" Cause she totally crushes my idea that if we educate people and give them cheap birth control, they won't go out and fuck up and get pregnant. BUT THEY DO!!! I also yell at people. When I see kids just bumming around on bikes when they should be in school, I let them know how I feel with plenty of cursing out the car window.Now that I think about it though, I'm sure there are people in the medical community and others who get pissed at people like me. Smoking cigarettes and drinking a case of beer after a day that included no exercise, two sausage biscuits, and a four-person serving of fettucine alfredo or some shit...[Edited on May 20, 2007 at 11:23 PM. Reason : sss]
5/20/2007 11:15:47 PM
^^ Baloney. In practice, any currency or commodity used to measure price is also the subject of supply and demand. Besides, demand is not perfectly inelastic. Your position only works as a short-term proposition. In the long-term, your position defies the basic law of demand--at lower prices, consumers will buy more of a good. THINK! And if the demand for gas is perfectly price inelastic, why do prices ever stop rising? inelastic: "relatively unresponsive to changes, as demand when it fails to increase in proportion to a decrease in price." Are you a Keynesian?[Edited on May 21, 2007 at 12:30 AM. Reason : .]
5/21/2007 12:20:50 AM
I'm speaking in relatives, not absolutes. Both supply and demand are relatively inelastic to price changes. We are running out of new wells to drill, and current wells are producing less oil. OPEC and other oil producers have not been able to raise production despite record high profits per barrel of oil. That's called inelasticity of supply. Consumption has not gone down despite ever-rising oil prices. Thats called inelasticity of demand. What is so hard to understand?Now re-draw the graph with two extremely shallow lines intersecting. Make the slope something like 1:10. Then move the demand curve up a little or the supply curve down a little and see what happens.[Edited on May 21, 2007 at 12:33 AM. Reason : 2]
5/21/2007 12:31:56 AM
5/21/2007 12:39:25 AM
^^ I understand perfectly--I don't think you understand perfectly inelastic. Your last carefully worded post was nothing like your previous one in question:
5/21/2007 12:46:56 AM
5/21/2007 12:50:56 AM
5/21/2007 12:58:32 AM
and where, did you get that?
5/21/2007 1:02:20 AM
^ What difference does it make? Let me guess: You want to attack the source instead of the argument--as is your standard mode--right? I found it in Logic Land, which you should visit someday.
5/21/2007 1:05:25 AM
I don't like his explanation as to why people like gouging laws so much. I believe it has to do with how people view disasters. People can accept oil retailers making profits under normal circumstances where, arguably, everyone is prospering. But in the event of a disaster, people feel it is wrong for retailers to profit off the misery and desperation of others. I too recognize the gut reaction such statements should illicit. But what our gut fails to recognize is that high prices (profits) are more than just the retailer's reward for existing, they are a system of rationing scarce resources. That scarcity does not go away just because a disaster strikes; often a disaster increases scarcity. So why should high prices stop rationing scarcity just because doing so happens to benefit retailers financially? People enjoy examples, and my favorite one is motel rooms. After a hurricane strikes an area, much of the housing and motel space is damaged or destroyed, leaving many homeless. As it is, there are only so many motel rooms to go around and people will be desperate to use them, making them scarce. Without gouging laws, the motel will quickly take advantage of the situation by jacking up prices. By doing so, it is sending the signal that motel rooms are scarce and should be conserved. As such, individuals whose homes are merely damaged will instead opt to stay home to save money. Individuals that have a full tank of gas will instead opt to keep driving, taking rooms further away from the devastation with lower prices. Families with children that would normally take two rooms will instead save money by squeezing into one room. As a result of high motel prices, therefore, individuals who don't have the option of avoiding high prices can get a room at the local motel. Alternatively, with price gouging laws fixing prices, instead of scarce resources going to those most in need and therefore most willing to pay they will be consumed in a first come first serve basis. The first large family to the hotel takes two rooms, the group with a full tank of gas takes a room, the family that just wants to avoid a night without electricity takes a room. And late that night, after all the rooms are full up, arrives the multitudes of families with no where else to go; all they can do is start walking or sleep in the lobby. Now, since you don't know which group you will fall into, which of these two scenarios do you prefer? The gut reaction is to complain that the rich will tend to take rooms away from the poor if prices are allowed to rise. Better to allocate the rooms first come first serve than to allocate the rooms according to class. But this complaint is an exaggeration: a poorer family with a credit card desperate for their lives can easily outbid a wealthy family that is merely fleeing the discomfort of driving to the next motel, squeezing into one room, or staying home.
5/21/2007 2:06:05 AM
^ Aren't you a libertarian? The quotation is from Tom Lehman for the Ludwig von Mises Institute--von Mises was, of course, an economist and a well-known influence on the libertarian movement. And Lehman's analysis is dead-on. Is it your intention to disagree with everyone, LoneSnark? I understand that you probably view yourself as ruler of the economics' playground here. But--believe it or not--others, like me, actually have some coursework and interest in economics, too.[Edited on May 21, 2007 at 2:17 AM. Reason : .]
5/21/2007 2:14:38 AM
Eh, I disagree with some of the price gouging analysis.While government is certainly too quick to jump on the "gouging" bandwagon and use it in cases where its not appropriate, there are some good reasons for price gouging laws. Raising hotel prices or gas prices to a level that will keep supply from running out is precisely how the market should function. However, some people are apt to raise prices beyond that because they may temporarily gain monopoly power or they may find it easier to collude during a crisis.
5/21/2007 7:05:48 AM
At 3:00 alcohol is cheaper. you can get ethanol for 2:10/gallon i say everyone start converting now.
5/21/2007 8:12:22 AM
5/21/2007 8:45:48 AM
5/21/2007 9:54:56 AM
5/21/2007 10:10:21 AM
nutsmackr, your argument in favor of source disclosure works if he is quoting statistics or the like so you can look up where they came from and attempt to counter the method used to determine them. But there were no statistics in his post, only a logical argument. As such, who is speaking is irrelevant, all that matters is whether or not you can counter the argument or otherwise poke holes in the reasoning.
5/21/2007 10:16:46 AM
^ Do you have any arguments against the sinking ship example?Just curious b/c you seemed very anti-price gouging laws so I figured you'd have a counter argument for that example.
5/21/2007 11:52:22 AM
5/21/2007 12:43:03 PM
ok people have been saying the euro thing for a long time...you see, they don't really HAVE to drive. they're all sort of packed in like sardines.ohh and their hamburgers cost twice as much too.
5/21/2007 1:20:29 PM