The Real Reason Gasoline And Diesel Prices Are So High

 | May 17, 2022 02:28AM ET

By David Messler

  • Fuel prices have crept higher and higher this year, but the cause is quickly becoming a finger-pointing contest with no real winner
  • Rising demand and dwindling supply are the true force behind the increase in gasoline and diesel prices
  • While central banks can work to reduce demand, the market may struggle to solve supply issues

Oil prices are a common topic of conversation around the office water cooler these days. As you might expect, perspective matters. The folks at the Halliburton office in Midland, Texas likely view the advent of $100 WTI much more warmly than many others whose living doesn’t depend on it directly.

At the other end of the spectrum, truckers, the good folks who deliver everything from baby formula to hamburger patties, are pleading for relief from diesel prices that have doubled in the space of a year.

The old saying, “One man’s meat, is another man’s poison,” probably never rang truer. These pleas have caught the ears of many of our political leaders. With few exceptions, they have resolutely, and indignantly laid the blame for high gasoline , and diesel prices directly at the feet of the oil companies that produce, refine, and distribute these products.

The president also has made strident comments regarding oil companies. In a number of recent interviews, he has castigated them for diverting capital toward shareholders in lieu of break-neck drilling to raise oil supplies, with the desired outcome of lowering oil prices.

One can only wonder if the irony of that commentary is lost on the president.

President Biden has been frustrated in his attempts to reduce oil prices, or properly affix blame for them. Starting last year he publicly exhorted the Saudis to raise production to reduce prices.

The attendant irony of making this request to one of the top global oil producers seems to once again be lost on the Commander-in-Chief.

The EIA-Weekly Petroleum Status Report-WPSR does not suggest this trip was fruitful.