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Monday, May 4, 2026

AMERICANA / WHAT'S THE IN THE PRICE OF A GALLON OF GAS

As US gas prices climb, politicians are looking at ways to lower them. An economist breaks down what does − and doesn’t − move the number on the sign at the gas station. 

Guest Blog /By Robert I. Harris, Georgia Institute of Technology via The Conversation U.S.--The U.S. Energy Information Administration expects nationwide retail gasoline prices to average near US$4.30 a gallon for April 2026 – the highest monthly average of the year. The political response has been familiar. Georgia has suspended its state gas tax, other states are weighing their own tax holidays, and the White House has issued a temporary waiver of a law known as the Jones Act in hopes of moving more domestic fuel to East Coast ports. 

As an energy economist, I am often asked about what contributes to gas prices and what different policies can do to affect them. 

The price of a retail gallon of gas is the sum of four things: the cost of crude oil, refining, distribution and marketing, and taxes. 

 In nationwide figures from January 2026, crude oil accounted for about 51% of the pump price, refining roughly 20%, distribution and marketing about 11% and taxes about 18%. That mix shifts with conditions: When crude oil prices spike, that can drive more than 60% of the price; when the price drops, taxes and logistics are larger shares of the cost. 

Crude oil is the biggest ingredient 

Because the price of crude oil is the largest element, most of the price at the pump is derived from the global oil market. 

Usually, big swings in crude prices come mainly from shifts in global demand and expectations – not from supply disruptions, according to widely cited research in 2009 by the economist Lutz Kilian. 

But what is happening in early 2026 with the war in Iran is one of the exceptions: a classic supply shock. Severe disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz and attacks on Middle East oil infrastructure have taken millions of barrels a day off the global market. 

Most drivers generally can’t quickly reduce how much they drive or how much gas they use when prices rise, so gasoline demand doesn’t change much in the short run. That means a jump in crude costs tends to result in people paying more rather than driving less. 

 

California gasoline and diesel prices

Refining, regulations and the California puzzle 

Refining turns crude into gasoline at industrial scale. The U.S. doesn’t have a single gasoline market, though. Roughly a quarter of U.S. gasoline is a cleaner-burning blend of petroleum-derived chemicals called “reformulated gasoline,” which is required in urban areas across 17 states and the District of Columbia to reduce smog. 

California uses an even stricter formulation that few out-of-state refineries make. California is also geographically isolated: No pipelines bring gasoline in from other U.S. refining regions. 

California’s gasoline prices have long run above the national average, explained in part by higher state taxes and stricter environmental rules. But since a refinery fire in Torrance, California, in 2015 reduced production capacity, the state’s prices have been about 20 to 30 cents a gallon higher than what those factors would indicate. 

Energy economist and University of California, Berkeley, professor Severin Borenstein has called this the “mystery gasoline surcharge” and attributes it to the fact that there isn’t as much competition between refineries or gas stations in California as in other states. California’s own Division of Petroleum Market Oversight says the surcharge cost the state’s drivers about $59 billion from 2015 to 2024. It’s not exactly clear who is getting that money, but it could be gas stations themselves or refineries, through complex contracts with gas stations. 

Getting the gas into your car 

The distribution and marketing category covers the costs of everything involved in getting the gasoline from the refinery gate to your tank. 

Gasoline moves by pipeline, ship, rail and truck to wholesale terminals, and then by local delivery truck to service stations. 

At the retailer’s end, the key factors are station rent and labor, the cost to buy gasoline in bulk to be able to sell it, credit card fees of as much as 6 to 10 cents a gallon at current prices, and franchise fees paid to the national brand, such as Sunoco or ExxonMobil, for permission to put their branding on the gas station. 

Most gas station operators net only a few cents per gallon on fuel itself – which is why many gas stations are really convenience stores with pumps out front. Borenstein and some of his collaborators have also documented that retail gas prices rise quickly when wholesale costs climb but fall slowly when wholesale costs drop. 

The question of gas tax holidays 

The federal government charges a tax on fuel, of 18.4 cents a gallon for gasoline and 24.3 cents a gallon for diesel. States charge their own taxes, ranging from 70.9 cents a gallon for gas in California to 8.95 cents in Alaska. 

When gas prices rise, many politicians start talking about temporarily suspending their state’s gas tax. That does reduce prices, but not as much as politicians – or consumers – might hope. 

Research on past gas tax holidays has found that consumers get about 79% of the reduction in gas taxes. That means oil companies and fuel retailers keep about one-fifth of the tax cut for themselves rather than passing that savings to the public. 

Gas tax holidays also reduce funding for what the taxes are designed to pay for, typically roads and bridges. That pushes road and bridge upkeep costs onto future drivers and general taxpayers. 

There is an additional problem, too: Taxes on gasoline are supposed to charge drivers for some of the costs their driving imposes on everyone else – carbon emissions, local air pollution, congestion and crashes. But Borenstein has found that U.S. fuel tax levels are already far below the true cost to society. Removing the tax on drivers effectively raises the costs for everyone else. 

The Jones Act: A small number that adds up 

The 1920 Jones Act is a federal law that requires cargo moving between U.S. ports to travel on vessels built and registered in the U.S., owned by U.S. citizens, and crewed primarily by U.S. citizens and permanent residents. Of the world’s 7,500 oil tankers, only 54 meet this requirement. Only 43 of these can transport refined fuels such as gasoline. 

So, despite significant refining capacity on the Gulf Coast, some U.S. gasoline is exported overseas even as the Northeast imports fuel, in part reflecting the relatively high cost of moving fuel between U.S. ports. 

Economists Ryan Kellogg and Rich Sweeney estimate that the law raises East Coast gasoline prices by about a penny and a half per gallon on average, costing drivers roughly $770 million a year. In light of the war’s effect on gas prices, the Trump administration has temporarily suspended the Jones Act requirements – an action more commonly taken when hurricanes knock out Gulf Coast refineries and pipeline networks. 


What moves the number 

The result of all these factors is that the price that drivers see at the pump mostly reflects the global price of crude, plus a stack of domestic costs, only some of which are inefficient. 

Tax holidays give a partial, short-lived rebate. Jones Act waivers trim pennies, though permanent repeal may cause more fundamental changes, such as reduced rail and truck transport of all goods, which could lower costs, emissions and infrastructure damage associated with cargo transportation. Harmonizing fuel blends across states and seasons may lower prices somewhat, but likely at the expense of increased emissions. 

Ultimately, the best protection against oil price shocks is a more efficient gas-burning vehicle, or one that doesn’t burn gasoline at all. 

In the meantime, the best I can offer as an economist is clarity about what that $4.30 actually buys. 

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Robert I. Harris is an Assistant Professor of Economics, Georgia Institute of Technology 

Sunday, May 3, 2026

MIND THE GAFFE / SEND THE DEPARTED OFF ON A CHARIOT OF PITHY PRAISE INSTEAD OF A USED EDSEL


Good Lord, that obit’s a botch. Back you go—next Chiltern Railways into London. And this time, insist they mind the gaffe.”

Recently, this blog received word from a London magazine that a minor poet of the mother tongue had died (without ever being touched by a Nobel Prize--my words not his). 

 Sad enough on both counts. 

Sadder still was the send-off: a laborious obituary that read like a man trying to teach a toddler the whys and wherefores of Beowulf over lukewarm tea. 

The salutatorian, who freely admits he never met, much less spoke with J. H. Prynne [1936-2026], nonetheless pressed on, choreographing an elaborate and largely unreadable assault on literary modesty. One searches for a kinder phrase, but “pretentious babble” refuses to yield its ground. 

The trouble announced itself early. In the opening paragraph alone, he invoked Keats and Auden, then marched in, one by one, comparing our departed with every great poet ever to have drawn breath in England. I

t was less tribute than overcrowding. I had the odd sensation of staring at a 1974 Vauxhall stranded on the polished floor of a Mayfair Aston Martin showroom, its dents and faded paint suddenly reimagined as distinction simply because of its surroundings. One was meant to admire the dandelion because it happened to grow in Buckingham Palace’s garden. The poor Vauxhall achieved a kind of borrowed grandeur, though it would have been far happier on the road. 

If there is mercy in the hereafter, St. Peter might consider sending Prynne briefly back, if only to defend himself against such inflated ceremony. Reading the piece was akin to enduring the hours-long oratory that preceded Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, sound and fury that leaves one longing for the clean strike of a single ungilded sentence. 

Sage parents advise us not to speak ill of the dead. 

Fair enough. 

But for those of us still breathing, the author of dear Prynne's rambling obituary remains very much among the living, and answerable. Alas, one can only hope for better days, and better criticism, ahead. 


IN PRAISE OF A FEW J.H. PRYNNE PHRASES 

“The whole thing it is, the difficult matter.” — Kitchen Poems (1968) 

“What words say, it is the difficult matter.” — The White Stones (1969) 

“A glass of salt water is no comfort.” — The White Stones (1969) 

“We are drawn onward by what we cannot see.” — Brass (1971) 

“The mind will not become itself by force.” — Brass (1971) 

“Each thing is what it is and not another thing.” — Wound Response (1974) 

“Memory is the cause of it.” — The Oval Window (1983) 

“The air is thick with what we mean.” — Bands Around the Throat (1987)