[PRCo] Re: Inflation
bob at dietrichsfam.com
bob at dietrichsfam.com
Sun Apr 6 18:38:39 EDT 2008
Wawa, our local convenience store is testing the concept of charging % cents
less for a gallon of gas if paying in cash. Coming into the store and
paying cash that is. Personally the $2 I would save walking across the
parking lot in the rain then waiting for 10 minutes to hand my money to some
kid that can't make change correctly is just not worth it to me.
My dad had a gas station and though I never got involved in the money aspect
I know he didn't make much at it. The oil company controlled everything,
including his ability to make a profit.
-----Original Message-----
From: pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org
[mailto:pittsburgh-railways-bounce at lists.dementia.org] On Behalf Of John
Swindler
Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 9:47 AM
To: pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org; Lybarger Ed; Bente Bruce; SCHNEIDER
ALAN; Craig Phil; Eshleman John
Subject: [PRCo] Re: Inflation
>From various sources, I get the impression that there was a higher mark-up
50 years ago. There was a recent article noting that profit margins are
very thin - gas stations are making their profit on the sodas and subs that
you buy, so the real trick is to get you into the store. Paying at the pump
helps with costs, but hurts potential revenue.
I thought I read somewhere recently that some countries are starting to
change their pricing of crude to other currencies??????? Having senior
moment trying to recall source.
There was also a surprising comment recently that oil from Alaska has been
cut in half over the last decade, and that they now have to heat the ground
to get it to flow. Guess that means that Alaska is pass it's peak. Also
going further out into the ocean to drill, and this could cause problems
with some 'rule of the sea' being pushed by world government types. Again,
a senior moment trying to recall details.
John
> To: trams2 at comcast.net; bbente at bellsouth.net;
pittsburgh-railways at dementia.org; alschneider2 at juno.com;
philgcraig204 at yahoo.com; jdeshlemanmd at aol.com> From:
fwschneider at comcast.net> Subject: [PRCo] Inflation> Date: Sat, 5 Apr 2008
15:56:05 -0400> > In the Shuman slides I came across a color slide of a
Pittsburgh > Railways route 60 trolley car passing a gasoline station in
Homestead > in 1958, almost 50 years ago. The price at the pump for regular
was > 29.9. If we work with the idea that inflation normally moves the >
decimal one place in fifty years, that would jack it up to $2.99 > 9/10s
today. Add a little more for the added costs of unleaded and > perhaps $3.10
or $3.20 is reasonable ... we're right in the ball > park, aren't we?
(Understand that I'm not even considering using > the consumer price index
in my thought process because it is adjusted > to consumption and doesn't
reflect raw inflation.)> > But very little of the liquid fossil fuels we
burn are pumped out o!
f > the ground in the U. S. What stuns me is that we are buying foreign >
oil in dollars and the U. S. dollar has gone to hell in a hand basket >
thanks to our borrowing to run our government, borrowing to give tax >
refunds, the collapse of our mortgage market, etc. It is worth > about 59%
of what it was against the Euro just ten years ago. We've > lost about 20%
against the Canadian dollar in the last year and they > are the largest
source of oil in North America.> > The independent truckers want to strike
because the price of fuel is > up but all I can see is something far less
than normal inflation. > If we adjust that inflation to the loss in the
value of the dollar, > then our gallon of gasoline should be somewhere
between $3.84 and > $5.12 a gallon depending on where we buy the crude oil
and No. 2 > diesel, which is taxed to a greater degree, should be about 25
cents > a gallon more.> > Somebody want to tell me what I'm not seeing? Was
there a lot of > markup in the !
price of fuel 50 years ago that isn't there today? > Have the oil comp
any's sacrificed investment to keep the price at the > pump low?> > fws>
_________________________________________________________________
Use video conversation to talk face-to-face with Windows Live Messenger.
http://www.windowslive.com/messenger/connect_your_way.html?ocid=TXT_TAGLM_WL
_Refresh_messenger_video_042008
More information about the Pittsburgh-railways
mailing list