Record-High
Gasoline Further Burdens Consumers in Europe
30
April, 2012
Mumtaz
Ozkaya, a leather-clothing salesman in London, is slashing his usual
1,000 miles (1,609 kilometers) a month of driving by 30 percent and
taking cheaper vacations, as record fuel prices burden European
motorists.
“Wages
are still the same so I am cutting back on miles and also on
holidays,” Ozkaya said in an April 23 interview at a Shell-branded
service station near Old Street in the U.K. capital, where regular
gasoline costs 143 pence a liter ($8.76 a gallon). “Whereas we used
to go on holiday to a five-star hotel for three weeks that is now a
four-star for two weeks.”
The
average retail price in the European Union’s 27 member nations
surged to a peak of 1.69 euros a liter ($8.44 a gallon) on April 20
with Germany, France, the U.K., Greece, Italy and Spain all at
records, according to European Commission data. The cost of gasoline
at the pump in the continent, more than double U.S. levels, had made
a fresh high every week since Jan. 13. U.K. gasoline advanced to a
new all-time high last week.
Policy
makers are confronted with an oil-price increase that threatens to
curb consumers’ spending power at a time when at least six of the
17 euro nations are in recession. The continent, which is struggling
to contain a sovereign-debt crisis that has already forced Greece,
Ireland and Portugal to seek bailouts, has fewer ways to combat
scarcities after shrinking profits and declining demand forced the
closure of the most European refineries in three decades.
Vicious
Circle
“It’s
a major negative for the growth story on top of so many negatives
right now in Europe,” James Knightley, senior economist at ING
Groep NV, the largest Dutch financial-services company, said by phone
from London on April 24. “At a time when household incomes are
under immense pressure from wages being frozen and rising
unemployment, rising fuel costs mean consumers are left with less and
less money to spend on services.”
Weaker
household spending delays investment by corporations required for
economic growth, creating a “nasty vicious circle,” Knightley
said.
European
Central Bank President Mario Draghi said on April 4 that euro-area
inflation will stay above 2 percent this year, with “upside risks”
stemming from higher-than-expected oil prices. “We will pay
particular attention to any signs of pass- through from higher energy
prices to wages, profits and general price-setting,” he said.
Confidence
Plunges
Italy’s
inflation rate was at a six-month high of 3.8 percent this month amid
higher energy costs and tax increases passed as part of Prime
Minister Mario Monti’s austerity program, Rome-based national
statistics office Istat said today in a preliminary report.
Consumer
confidence in the country plunged this month to the lowest since 1996
as Monti’s cost-cutting measures deepened the recession that
started in the fourth quarter. Rising crude prices and the
government’s increase of value-added taxes led to a jump in
gasoline costs that neared 2 euros ($2.65) a liter last week,
crimping demand. Business confidence declined to a two-year low.
Gasoline
prices rose 3.1 percent in April from the previous month and 20.8
percent from a year earlier, the fastest pace since the data series
began in 1996, according to Istat.
A
driver filling the 55-liter (14.5-gallon) tank of Europe’s most
popular car, Volkswagen AG’s (VOW) Golf hatchback, pays 92.40
euros, or $122.38, compared with $55.54 for the same amount in the
U.S.
Driving
Less
With
fuel prices rising, Europeans like Britain’s Ozkaya are driving
less. In Italy, March gasoline use decreased 9.5 percent from the
previous year to 713,000 metric tons, while diesel and gasoil demand
dropped 8 percent, according to data from the ministry of Economic
Development. French gasoline consumption dropped 9.1 percent that
month, from a year earlier, the Union Francaise des Industries
Petrolieres, an industry group, said in an e-mailed statement April
16. In the U.K. last year, gasoline demand dropped by about 6 percent
to 16 billion liters, according to the Retail Motor Industry
Federation, while diesel consumption remained stable at 18 billion
liters.
“It
is hitting household budgets hard,” Brian Madderson, chairman of
the federation’s petrol division, said in an April 20 phone
interview from London.
“Motorists are cutting
back on fuel expenditure where they possibly can.” The RMI
represents 5,500 independent gas station operators in Britain,
two-thirds of the country’s total.
U.S.
Election
In
a U.S. presidential election year, gasoline has become an issue for
politicians and voters. The nationwide average retail price climbed
to $3.94 a gallon on April 4, the highest in 11 months, and has since
retreated to $3.82, according to AAA. On April 17, President Barack
Obama urged Congress to bolster federal supervision of oil markets,
including bigger penalties for market manipulation and greater power
for regulators to increase the amount of money traders must put up to
back their energy bets.
Americans
pay less because taxes are lower, accounting for 11 percent of the
retail price, compared with 60 percent in Britain, according to data
from the U.S. Energy Department and the AA, a U.K. motoring
organization.
Fuel
has become more expensive on both sides of the Atlantic after
international crude prices rose this year on concern that Middle East
oil shipments would be disrupted after the U.S. and EU tightened
sanctions against Iran over its nuclear program. New York-traded
wholesale gasoline futures rallied 19 percent in the year through
April 27, the second- biggest gain in the Standard & Poor’s
GSCI index of 24 commodities after soybeans.
Wholesale
gasoline in northwest Europe, traded on barges, advanced 18 percent
this year.
Exchange
Rate
Fluctuations
in the dollar-euro exchange rate mean that prices are more extreme in
Europe than in the U.S. In euro terms, the price of Brent crude
rallied to an all-time high at 96.27 euros a barrel on March 13,
versus the previous peak of 93.07 euros in July 2008. In dollar
terms, Brent hasn’t yet exceeded its 2008 record of $147.50.
Back
at Old Street, filling his car with 70 pounds worth of fuel, Ozkaya
isn’t confident his holiday spending budget will improve anytime
soon. “Maybe next year it will be a three- star” hotel, he said.
The
following table shows retail fuel prices for six European countries,
and an average of 27 nations, in euros a liter, as of April 27. The
table also shows the year-to-date gain.
Country
Price YTD 2012 Gain
France 1.65 7.5%
Germany 1.71 6.9%
Italy 1.85 9.4%
Greece 1.85 10.8%
U.K. 1.74 7.8%
Spain 1.47 8.5%
EU
Average 1.68 8.0%
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