by eXpat » Wed 22 Feb 2012, 14:28:54
High oil prices test U.S. economy, Obama
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A') jump in gasoline prices is threatening to smother the flickering flames of the US economic recovery and with them President Barack Obama’s hopes of retaining the White House.
Groggy but still standing after a four-year slog through recession, the US economy has — just about — weathered shocks from Japan’s earthquake and tsunami, the Arab Spring and Europe’s ongoing debt crisis.
Now, as unemployment finally starts to ease and growth picks up, rising oil prices could land another haymaker to the gut of the world’s largest economy.
In the last year, tensions in Iran, Syria, Libya, Nigeria and South Sudan, refinery squeezes and hardening global demand have conspired to push crude and gasoline prices higher.
For Americans that has meant a 12.5 percent rise in prices at the pump — from an average of $3.17 a gallon a year ago to $3.57 today — defacing many a household balance sheet.
Rising energy prices are “one of the predominant risks to the economy this year,” according to Deutsche Bank’s chief US economist Joseph LaVorgna.
LaVorgna and his team estimate that for every one cent increase in gasoline prices, household energy costs increase by around $1.4 billion.
That cash for the most part goes abroad, instead of washing through the domestic economy.
There are signs rising prices are starting to shake consumer confidence. According to Gallup and other pollsters, economic confidence has started to fall back after a series of encouraging gains.
Oil prices are actually expected to fall in the next few months as the Northern Hemisphere enters the lull between high-demand periods of winter and summer. But it is likely to be temporary relief.
According to the American Automobile Association, gasoline prices could rise as high as $4.25 by the end of May, well beyond the symbolic $4.00 point that many Americans consider too high.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2012/02/22/high-oil-prices-test-u-s-economy-obama/?utm_source=dlvr.it&utm_medium=twitter
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and besides, the pig likes it."
George Bernard Shaw
“You can ignore reality, but you can't ignore the consequences of ignoring reality.” Ayn Rand