Lower oil prices ease load on consumers and Obama

By ASSOCIATED PRESS   Thursday, May 17, 2012
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In this Sunday, May 13, 2012, photo, gas prices are displayed on a board at a Hess station in Hoboken, N.J. Oil and gasoline prices are sinking, giving relief to businesses and consumers who a few weeks ago seemed about to face the highest fuel prices ever. The average U.S. retail gasoline price has dropped 21 cents a gallon to $3.73 since hitting a 2012 peak of $3.94 on April 6.

In this Sunday, May 13, 2012, photo, gas prices are displayed on a board at a Hess station in Hoboken, N.J. Oil and gasoline prices are sinking, giving relief to businesses and consumers who a few weeks ago seemed about to face the highest fuel prices ever. The average U.S. retail gasoline price has dropped 21 cents a gallon to $3.73 since hitting a 2012 peak of $3.94 on April 6.

— What only weeks ago was seen as a serious threat to the economic recovery could now turn into a stimulus everyone can love.

Oil and gasoline prices are sinking, giving relief to businesses and consumers who a few weeks ago seemed about to face the highest fuel prices ever.

President Barack Obama's re-election prospects could also benefit, especially if prices keep falling as some analysts expect. A majority of Americans disapproved of Obama's handling of gas prices in an AP-GfK poll early this month. But that was before the full effect of the recent drop had reached drivers.

The average U.S. retail gasoline price has dropped 21 cents a gallon to $3.73 since hitting a 2012 peak of $3.94 on April 6.

The economy could gain, too. Consumers who spend less on fuel have more to spend on other purchases, from autos and furniture to appliances and vacations, which could help drive economic output and job growth.

The price drop will likely boost consumer confidence. It also comes at a timely moment: Ahead of the Memorial Day weekend, a busy one for travel and entertainment spending.

"It's extra money in the wallets of most American consumers, and that's going to help," said James Hamilton, an economist at the University of California, San Diego who studies oil prices.

Lower oil prices also mean cheaper diesel and jet fuel for shippers and airlines.

Crude oil, which is used to make gasoline, is at a seven-month low of $92.81 a barrel. It's down nearly 13 percent since May 1. Behind the steady drop are larger fuel stockpiles, easing fears about Iran and expectations of lower demand as the global economy slows.

The average national gasoline price is expected to fall as low as $3.50 a gallon this summer. It could even dip near $3 in some states. The national average is being propped up by refinery problems in California that have lifted prices well above the national average there, according to Tom Kloza, chief oil analyst at the Oil Price Information Service.

A 50-cent drop in the gasoline price would save consumers roughly $70 billion over a year.

Earlier this year, oil and gasoline prices were jumping from already high levels. Global demand was rising. And production outages were reducing supplies. Tensions between Iran and the West over Iran's nuclear ambitions raised fears that output from the world's third-biggest exporter would plunge.

The price of U.S. benchmark oil rose to about $110 a barrel from $96 in the first three weeks of February. The price for international oil, used to make most of the gasoline in the United States, spiked even higher: to $126 per barrel from $110 over roughly the same period.

Gasoline prices in the U.S. appeared on track to soar past $4 a gallon nationwide. Confidence among U.S. consumers, already suffering from high unemployment and scant wage growth, would have likely worsened.

"People were prepared emotionally for $4.50 or $5 gasoline, so there's a sense of relief," Kloza says.

No one is yet overflowing with glee over current prices. So far this year, gasoline has averaged $3.67 a gallon nationwide. If sustained all year, that would be the highest annual average ever.

John Heimlich, chief economist at Airlines for America, a trade group, is among those who aren't ready to cheer. Jet fuel prices dipped below $3 per gallon for the first time in months Tuesday, he said.

"I need more than one day below $3," Heimlich said. "I need weeks and weeks and weeks."

John Tillman, who runs Certified Carpet Care in Wesley Chapel, Fla., spends $4,000 a month on fuel for his vans that crisscross the state, visiting restaurants and other clients. He says gasoline prices are still way too high and he thinks the government should do more to protect small businesses from high fuel prices. But he'll take any drop he can get.

"It's helped some," he said.

Hamilton and other economists say high unemployment and a weak job market are more important to the health of the U.S. economy than gasoline prices. Still, voters tend to blame presidents for high fuel prices, even if there's little a president can do to influence them.

It's less clear that voters give a president credit when gasoline prices fall.

Michael Dimock, associate director at the Pew Research Center, suspects that voters won't exactly thank Obama for $3.75 a gallon gasoline. Still, it dulls a weapon that his presumptive Republican challenger, Mitt Romney, would like to use to unseat the president.

And Obama can look forward to further help this fall. After Labor Day, refiners can begin using cheaper ingredients to make gasoline because wintertime clean air rules are less stringent. That should push gasoline prices lower between Labor Day and Election Day, barring hurricanes that can disrupt supplies or other global events, says Kloza.

"History will be working on behalf of the Democrats," he said.

___

Wiseman contributed from Washington. AP Staff writer Charles Babington contributed to this report from Washington.

reader COMMENTS
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(12)
WalterReuther
May 18, 2012 at 5:17 a.m.
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bebe,
For the numbers to have any context, you have to look at them as a percentage of GDP. It would be ignorant not to. We take inflation into consideration when we discuss costs now versus 30,40,50 years ago don't we? Well, when discussing federal spending, deficits and taxes it is necessary to do something similar. You must take percentage of GDP into consideration. That proves how much the economy has improved. Yes, spending is up and deficits are up, but that being the case, they are still smaller percentages of GDP than when G.W. Bush left office. It just goes to show how well corporations have done during the recession and recovery, how much they've wrung every drop of productivity out of the middle class while leaving us with lower wages and too few of us working. Corporate profits and CEO compensation are at historic highs. It's important to see that while the economy still seems to be hurting to a lot of us, the economy is actually doing much better. There are just far fewer people benefitting from it than there used to be. If you think that's not by design, you're kidding yourself.

wislady
May 17, 2012 at 9:35 p.m.
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Networks Ignore Embarrassing Political Defeat for Obama: 99-0 Defeat of President's Budget

Barack Obama suffered an embarrassing defeat, Wednesday, when the U.S. Senate rejected his budget 99-0. But, you wouldn't know it on ABC or CBS. The two networks completely skipped the political setback. NBC offered a single news brief on Thursday's Today.

On that program, news reader Natalie Morales allowed, "The Senate on Wednesday rejected President Obama's 2012 budget, the second year it has rejected the President's plan." Morales didn't mention the lopsided rejection, nor did she note that the House spurned the budget 414-0 in March.

ABC's World News and Good Morning America, as well as CBS's This Morning and Evening News both skipped the story. (Evening News did feature a story on the debt ceiling debate.)

Read more: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/scott-whitl...

WalterReuther
May 17, 2012 at 5:29 p.m.
Suggest removal

bebe,
Not true. Keep up with the updated numbers. I'm sure it's easy for you when it comes to Scott Walker.
*
http://cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofi...
*
http://cbo.gov/sites/default/files/cbofi...
*
http://thinkprogress.org/economy/2012/05...

WalterReuther
May 17, 2012 at 4:16 p.m.
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Wow bebe,
You really raised the intellecutal level of the comments area on this article, didn't ya? Keep those little nuggets of wisdom coming! Truth is the economy has greatly improved since Obama took office. In fact, federal spending, taxes and deficits are all lower today than they were when Obama took office. That's just according to the Congressional Budget Office. You know, the Budget Office of the Congress. You know the Congress, right? It's the legislative branch of the government, and half of it (the House) is controlled by the Republican party.

dkush21
May 17, 2012 at 3:52 p.m.
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Funny,it seems the closer we get to election time, the gas prices go down. And after elections, seems like our elected officials(both Republican and Democrat)could care less about gas prices jumping up again.

WalterReuther
May 17, 2012 at 2:58 p.m.
Suggest removal

bebe,
The US economy is improving overall, but more importantly it is improving relative to the global economy which, as indicated by the above article, is slowing. That is why oil prices are going down. Also, global worries about Iran are diminishing as it has recently come out that sanctions have been very effective in taming that nation. The article also points out that fuel stockpiles have increased. None of these things are under the President's control in anyway though many blindly partisan folks tried to pin high gas prices on President Obama. Those same folks have gone predictably quiet now that gas prices are lower than they were this time last year.

cynicaleye
May 17, 2012 at 1:52 p.m.
(This comment was removed by the site staff.)

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