You touch on an important point, Rock--the inflation index is pretty low, and has been, for a long time now. Over the last fifteen years or so, inflation has hovered around 2.5%. So starting at 2000, 100 dollars then, across thirteen years at 2.5% inflation, is $137.50 now. (Even bumping that up to 3% inflation, since I was just reading quickly off a graph, results in $146,85, slightly less than 50% increase.) Contrast that with oil prices--take WTI and Brent, for example--
and from 2002 to the present day you'll see a roughly 500% increase in price. Plainly oil is outpacing inflation, at least in the USA. So I'd hesitate to use the term "inflation" in describing the price of oil, since "inflation" has a specific definition which doesn't seem to accurately describe what's going on with oil--and in fact, what I read about inflation discusses more the overall pricing of a wide variety of goods, not one specific product. But I'm not an economist so someone who is might want to disabuse me of this.




