Fill up now! Gas will go up another dollar!
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Sonofanump
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't. -
LJ
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't. -
j_crazyup refining capacity. supply and demand says that if supply is up (which it's not) demand (and therefore price) will come down.
this is directly a result of the government.
my 2 cents. -
LJ
No it's notj_crazy wrote:
this is directly a result of the government.
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/dnav/pet/pet_pnp_wiup_dcu_nus_w.htm
Anyways, that's just gas prices you are talking about. Plus, gas isn't priced off of consumer supply and demand, it's priced off of retailer supply and demand and distributor supply and demand. In other words, the consumer's demand is 3rd on the list. If a distributor thinks that there is going to be a ton of driving rather than flying over Christmas, his demand will go up, causing the prices to rise, rather than the demand of the consumer actually going up. -
fan_from_texas
Good question, though we all know the answer.Little Danny wrote:
Not to provide fodder to move this to the political thread, but everytime the gas prices went up .1 last year everyone was blaming Bush and his ties to the oil industry. What is the excuse now and why aren't dems calling for Barry's head?Mr. 300 wrote: Damn that Obama and his big oil cronies!!!!
It was stupid to blame Bush for it, and it's stupid to blame Obama for it. But I sure wish it went both ways. -
Fab1bThat's all I want is for balming to go both ways, I know the pres can't control it but their are far too many people that don't understand!
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Sonofanump
I understand the tax is fixed, but it is high (extremely) and a large portion of what we pay per gallon.LJ wrote:
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't. -
LJSonofanump wrote:
I understand the tax is fixed, but it is high (extremely) and a large portion of what we pay per gallon.LJ wrote:
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't.
How is it extremely high? That is how the roads are payed for and it is a federal and state tax combined which differs in each state. The federal tax is 7% per current gallon. -
JTizzleIf they would take Gas and Oil off the commodities market the price would drop drastically! These guys running the price up is crazy when they have no reason to. People not owning a tanker nor a gas station should have no right to buy oil only to hurt the working man. Keep taxing 100% of America to pay for pension funds and other funds also. Only way these idiots got to make money these days.. Short the dollar go long on oil is starting to get a little bit old don't ya think! They ran sugar up and are backing off now and starting to hit chocolate I mean are you kidding me.
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LJ
If those are your thoughts, then you need to be advocating the whole commodities market be shut down, as well as the options market.JTizzle wrote: If they would take Gas and Oil off the commodities market the price would drop drastically! These guys running the price up is crazy when they have no reason to. People not owning a tanker nor a gas station should have no right to buy oil only to hurt the working man. Keep taxing 100% of America to pay for pension funds and other funds also. Only way these idiots got to make money these days.. Short the dollar go long on oil is starting to get a little bit old don't ya think! They ran sugar up and are backing off now and starting to hit chocolate I mean are you kidding me. -
JTizzleIt would be nice that will probably never happen in my lifetime, people don't care when middle class lose jobs but heaven forbid the rich bankers and some stock brokers lose their jobs. They didn't drop the Modernization act and get rid of Glass Steagall for no reason! I mean what ever happened to buying a stock that you believe in and holding it till it reached your target and sell. Now the shorts just take our money right out of our pockets, that is whole different issue though.
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Sonofanump
I do not remember that in macro 361. Some of the tax might go to that purpose, but it is not even close to being a dollar for dollar ratio.LJ wrote:Sonofanump wrote:
I understand the tax is fixed, but it is high (extremely) and a large portion of what we pay per gallon.LJ wrote:
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't.
How is it extremely high? That is how the roads are payed for and it is a federal and state tax combined which differs in each state. The federal tax is 7% per current gallon. -
LJ
It is quite close. The rest is almost always used for a transportation related purpose.Sonofanump wrote:
I do not remember that in macro 361. Some of the tax might go to that purpose, but it is not even close to being a dollar for dollar ratio.LJ wrote:Sonofanump wrote:
I understand the tax is fixed, but it is high (extremely) and a large portion of what we pay per gallon.LJ wrote:
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't.
How is it extremely high? That is how the roads are payed for and it is a federal and state tax combined which differs in each state. The federal tax is 7% per current gallon.
http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/2048.html -
Sonofanump
I could not find in that article the answer to my question. What percentage of the gas tax goes to transportation? I remember (this is my recollection, I would like evidence that I am incorrect or correct) that 50% of the tax goes to transportation, where does the other portion go. I see that 40% of the budget comes from the gas tax. I would feel better if the monies were used 100% (a true consumption tax) for road and used more efficently.LJ wrote:
It is quite close. The rest is almost always used for a transportation related purpose.Sonofanump wrote:
I do not remember that in macro 361. Some of the tax might go to that purpose, but it is not even close to being a dollar for dollar ratio.LJ wrote:Sonofanump wrote:
I understand the tax is fixed, but it is high (extremely) and a large portion of what we pay per gallon.LJ wrote:
Point is moot. It's a fixed cost. Sales tax changes with the price, the gas tax does not.Sonofanump wrote:
20% > .6.75%LJ wrote:
Then you could blame the gov't for the price of your tv, or the price of your car. In Ohio, everything except food has a consumption tax. Point is moot.Sonofanump wrote:
You mean except for the $.46.4 tax on every gallon.LJ wrote: It's ridiculous to blame any of the pricing on the gov't.
How is it extremely high? That is how the roads are payed for and it is a federal and state tax combined which differs in each state. The federal tax is 7% per current gallon.
http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/2048.html -
LJ
It all goes to transportation. You are asking what percentage goes to maintaining the roads and building roads. That I do not have in front of me. But 100% of the gas tax goes to transportation related items.Sonofanump wrote:
I could not find in that article the answer to my question. What percentage of the gas tax goes to transportation? I remember (this is my recollection, I would like evidence that I am incorrect or correct) that 50% of the tax goes to transportation, where does the other portion go. I see that 40% of the budget comes from the gas tax. I would feel better if the monies were used 100% (a true consumption tax) for road and used more efficently.
Edit- Federal that is. I dunno what each state does with theirs. -
Sonofanump
I think that near 20% of the tax is federal and near 80% state. (this is Ohio, now Alaska is low and California is high)LJ wrote:
It all goes to transportation. You are asking what percentage goes to maintaining the roads and building roads. That I do not have in front of me. But 100% of the gas tax goes to transportation related items.Sonofanump wrote:
I could not find in that article the answer to my question. What percentage of the gas tax goes to transportation? I remember (this is my recollection, I would like evidence that I am incorrect or correct) that 50% of the tax goes to transportation, where does the other portion go. I see that 40% of the budget comes from the gas tax. I would feel better if the monies were used 100% (a true consumption tax) for road and used more efficently.
Edit- Federal that is. I dunno what each state does with theirs.
I really wish that I could find a link for where the state tax goes. -
LJ
I found 1 that in Texas 72% goes to transportation and the rest to public schoolsSonofanump wrote:
I think that near 20% of the tax is federal and near 80% state. (this is Ohio, now Alaska is low and California is high)LJ wrote:
It all goes to transportation. You are asking what percentage goes to maintaining the roads and building roads. That I do not have in front of me. But 100% of the gas tax goes to transportation related items.Sonofanump wrote:
I could not find in that article the answer to my question. What percentage of the gas tax goes to transportation? I remember (this is my recollection, I would like evidence that I am incorrect or correct) that 50% of the tax goes to transportation, where does the other portion go. I see that 40% of the budget comes from the gas tax. I would feel better if the monies were used 100% (a true consumption tax) for road and used more efficently.
Edit- Federal that is. I dunno what each state does with theirs.
I really wish that I could find a link for where the state tax goes.
In ohio 36% of the tax is federal and 44% is state. -
newarkcatholicfan2.44 today.
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ts1227
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believer
It never will.fan_from_texas wrote:Good question, though we all know the answer.
It was stupid to blame Bush for it, and it's stupid to blame Obama for it. But I sure wish it went both ways.
Those eeeeeevil Republicans (like W and Cheney) are in bed with Big Oil while those for-the-little-guy Democrats (like BHO and Biden) are powerless and at the mercy of Big Oil.
While the intellectually honest know that POTUS has little if any sway over the oil markets, it's ALWAYS politically correct to blame the Republicans when they are in power and excuse the Democrats when they control the DC scene. It's the way of things.
See the difference? -
LJ
Here, maybe you can stay more "current"newarkcatholicfan wrote: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Oil-skids-below-76-ahead-of-apf-1327262314.html?x=0
http://www.cx-portal.com/wti/oil_en.html -
fan_from_texasAren't we happy that the price of gas is going up? I mean, isn't the rhetoric that we want to get off foreign oil and encourage domestic energy production? Shouldn't Ds rejoice that we're going green, and Rs rejoice that the market is sending appropriate signals to encourage alternatives?
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newarkcatholicfan
That was the most current news updatew on yahoo when I posted it.LJ wrote:
Here, maybe you can stay more "current"newarkcatholicfan wrote: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Oil-skids-below-76-ahead-of-apf-1327262314.html?x=0
http://www.cx-portal.com/wti/oil_en.html -
LJ
Yahoo is at least 15 minutes behind on prices. Because of their contracts with people who pay for real time quotes, they have to be. If you are reading stories they are at least 30 minutes behind the market.newarkcatholicfan wrote:
That was the most current news updatew on yahoo when I posted it.LJ wrote:
Here, maybe you can stay more "current"newarkcatholicfan wrote: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/Oil-skids-below-76-ahead-of-apf-1327262314.html?x=0
http://www.cx-portal.com/wti/oil_en.html
Like I said, there is a link so you can at least be current. 30 minutes ago is not current.