*Warning, I do not reach a conclusion in this post. I have merely thrown some data together for analysis*
I often hear Europeans on this forum claim that higher gasoline prices do not effect them because they are already paying $4, $5, or even $6 per gallon.
The rise in gasoline prices from $2/gallon to $6/gallon did not happen overnight in Europe. Petrol taxes were raised slowly over the course of many years in many European countries. This gave time for consumers and businesses to adjust to the new fuel costs. I know that the UK used a mechanism called the "Fuel Price Escalator" which automatically increased fuel taxes in order to rise the cost of petrol by ~5% more than the rate of inflation from 1993 to 2000. This allowed consumers to adjust to gradually increasing prices rather than be forced to deal with a sudden, massive price upswing.
A small shortfall in gasoline production would lead to dramatically higher prices in the matters of days, not years. The UK's average gasoline prices could rise 50% and this would be equal to a 100% rise in price for American consumers.
OK, so the % increase in cost to fill up one's tank would be higher in the United States than in the UK.
But what about the cost per mile?
As this chart clearly shows, European cars get better gas mileage than American cars. In fact, one could argue that their cars are twice as efficient as American cars.
Twice the cost of fuel and twice the fuel economy...The price per mile is the same!
But here's the real kicker that people keep forgetting. Europeans pay high gas
taxes. This is money that European governments collect to spend on services.
Any increase in gasoline prices in the USA means that more money goes to OPEC's dictators. Europe's inflated gas prices reflect a redistribution of wealth from gas-consumers to friendly governments rather than unfriendly ones.
For whatever reason, I'm unable to find the actual % of European tax revenue which can be attributed to fuel taxes, but I know that they make up between %5 and 10% of total revenue.
US state and federal gas taxes bring in ~$60 billion a year.
The UK's fuel tax brings in nearly ~$45 billion a year.
So the US collects only a third more in taxes despite consuming nearly 11x as much oil.
If the US was able to create a tax mechanism simillar to the British model, the budget deficit would vanish tomorrow. (assuming a sudden doubling of gas prices didn't crash the consumer economy, which it might).
Just something to think about...