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NEW YORK – There's less money this summer for hotel rooms, surfboards and bathing suits. It's all going into the gas tank.

High prices at the pump are putting a squeeze on the family budget as the traditional summer driving season begins. For every $10 the typical household earns before taxes, almost a full dollar now goes toward gas, a 40 percent bigger bite than normal.

Households spent an average of $369 on gas last month. In April 2009, they spent just $201. Families now spend more filling up than they spend on cars, clothes or recreation. Last year, they spent less on gasoline than each of those things.

Jeffrey Wayman of Cape Charles, Va., spent Friday riding his motorcycle to North Carolina's Outer Banks, a day trip with his wife. They decided to eat snacks in a gas station parking lot rather than buy lunch because rising fuel prices have eaten so much into their budget over the past year that they can't ride as frequently as they would like.

"We used to do it a lot more, but not as much now," he said. "You have to cut back when you have a $480 gas bill a month."

Alex Martinez, a senior at Arcadia High School outside Los Angeles, said his family's trips to San Francisco, which they usually take once or more a year, are on hold. As he stopped at a gas station to put $5 of fuel in his car — not much more than a gallon — he said the high prices are crimping social life for him and his friends.

"We're always worrying, `How are we going to get home. We've got less than half a gallon left,'" Martinez said. "We definitely can't go out as much, and we can't go as far."

As Memorial Day weekend opens, the nationwide average for a gallon of unleaded is $3.81. Though prices have drifted lower in recent days, analysts expect average price for 2011 to come in higher than the previous record, $3.25 in 2008. A year ago, gas cost $2.76.

The squeeze is happening at a time when most people aren't getting raises, even as the economy recovers.

"These increases are not something consumers can shrug off," says James Hamilton, an economics professor at the University of California, San Diego, who studies gas prices. "It's a key part of the family budget."

The ramifications are far-reaching for an economy still struggling to gain momentum two years into a recovery. Economists say the gas squeeze makes people feel poorer than they actually are.

They're showing it by limiting spending far beyond the gas station. Wal-Mart recently blamed high gas prices for an eighth straight quarter of lower sales in the U.S. Target said gas prices were hurting sales of clothes.

Every 50-cent jump in the cost of gasoline takes $70 billion out of the U.S. economy over the course of a year, Hamilton says. That's about one half of one percent of gross domestic product.

The Commerce Department reported Friday that consumer spending rose just 0.1 percent in April, excluding the extra money spent on more expensive gas and food, while wages stayed flat for the second straight month.

Mike Nason, a marketing consultant from Laguna Niguel, Calif., says he's clipping coupons to save money for gas and cutting back wherever else he can. His daughter Chandler, 17, recently settled for a prom dress that cost $170 instead of asking her parents to spend $400 for another that caught her eye.

In prior years we would have spent more money on the dress, but money has become a big object," he says.

The tourism industry is bracing for an uncertain summer. AAA predicts the typical family will spend $692 on its vacation, down 14 percent from $809 last year. Many of those surveyed said they are planning shorter trips and expect to pinch pennies when they arrive.

AAA estimates 34.9 million Americans will travel 50 miles or more from home this weekend, an increase of about 100,000 from last year. But they will have to do more complicated math to make the summer budget work.

The median household income in the U.S. before taxes is just below $50,000, or about $4,150 per month. The $369 that families spent last month on gas represented 8.9 percent of monthly household income, according to an analysis by Fred Rozell, retail pricing director at Oil Price Information Service. Since 2000, the average is about 5.7 percent. For the year, the figure is 7.9 percent.

Only twice before have Americans spent this much of their income on gas. In 1981, after the last oil crisis, Americans spent 8.8 percent of household income on gas. In July 2008, when oil price spiked, they spent 10.2 percent.

Average hourly earnings, meanwhile, have risen just 1.9 percent in the past year. That's only just enough to keep up with inflation.

The good news is that analysts expect gas to fall to $3.50 a gallon in the coming weeks. In order for household gasoline expenses to return to their historical place in the family budget for the year, gas prices would have to fall by about half and stay that way for the rest of the year.

Demand for gasoline has fallen for eight straight weeks as drivers try to cut back, but higher prices can't keep drivers parked for long. Even with high prices this year, the government expects gasoline demand to grow slightly for the year.

"Drivers try to do what they can, but they have to go almost all the places they go," says David Greene, a researcher at the Center of Transportation Analysis at Oak Ridge National Laboratory and manager of the Department of Energy website fueleconomy.gov. "There's no magic gizmo that will drastically change someone's gasoline use."

Mike Siroub clutched his heart as he described the experience of filling up lately. He owns a Union Oil gas station in Arcadia, Calif., but one of his cars is also a 1975 Oldsmobile.

"Think about it," he said. "If you've got a car with a 30-gallon tank and gas is $4 a gallon and you fill it up, you're out $120."

He says high gas prices will keep him home this weekend. And he runs a gas station for a living. As he greeted a steady stream of customers at his station, he laughed and said, "I have to pay for gas just like everyone else."
 

cmd34

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Meanwhile, oil companies are making record profits. What's wrong with this picture?
 

Cythim

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I fill both of my tanks once a month, but I could get away with once every two months if I wasn't quite so lazy. Time to find new commuting habits.
 

Sheik

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I spend no less than $1,200 a month in gas. It's a crying shame. I am able to recoup most of that, I figure it in when we submit estimates. It's getting difficult to do that anymore. Raw materials are out of sight and a lot of guys are giving work away as it is. There's not a whole lot of room to fit fuel costs in.

I'm able to write it off too, but still. There's not a damn thing we can do to change the prices, so I try not to think about it.
 
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I spend no less than $1,200 a month in gas. It's a crying shame. I am able to recoup most of that, I figure it in when we submit estimates. It's getting difficult to do that anymore. Raw materials are out of sight and a lot of guys are giving work away as it is. There's not a whole lot of room to fit fuel costs in.

I'm able to write it off too, but still. There's not a damn thing we can do to change the prices, so I try not to think about it.

Make the messcans pay for the gas.
 

63echo

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Fuel costs aren't really killing me since I only fill up my truck twice a month and do most of my tooling around on a motorcycle, but it definitely figures into what I do. I live in a pretty remote area, and gone are the days when I'd drive 40 miles to the nearest WalMart just for the hell of it. I plan that crap in advance and use Amazon (Prime is the shit) for any "emergencies" I have that can't wait for longer than the two days it takes for orders to get to me.

Heating oil, though...that's a killer. I spend $1200 a month just to stay alive in the winter time. It's ridiculous.
 

Sheik

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Fuel costs aren't really killing me since I only fill up my truck twice a month and do most of my tooling around on a motorcycle, but it definitely figures into what I do. I live in a pretty remote area, and gone are the days when I'd drive 40 miles to the nearest WalMart just for the hell of it. I plan that crap in advance and use Amazon (Prime is the shit) for any "emergencies" I have that can't wait for longer than the two days it takes for orders to get to me.

Heating oil, though...that's a killer. I spend $1200 a month just to stay alive in the winter time. It's ridiculous.


Ouch.
 

Sheik

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Meanwhile, oil companies are making record profits. What's wrong with this picture?


That's my biggest gripe. The profits keep growing. I have no problem with price increases to maintain profit, but when you're getting into peoples pockets just because you can, now that's dirty.

They have us, though. What are we going to do? Ride our mountain bikes to work? Take the bus? I hope they all rot in hell, but they've got us.
 

Plymkr

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Meanwhile, oil companies are making record profits. What's wrong with this picture?

Oil companies are a business and provide a service to people. Just like McDonalds. Look at Wall Street and the scare tactics used by our own government for high gas prices. It's all based on a fear. While I can't believe the profit the companies make, how can I scold? My rig needs the product they produce. It's a business. Wanna be pissed at someone, be pissed at the very people in our own government that aren't doing dick to change the situation. I don't mean government interference with the oil companies, that is not the governments place to do that. I mean, start drilling here, lessen the demand on foreign oil, the US needs to become a player again in the game.

Take into consideration that this country hasn't built a refinery in over 40yrs, anywhere. Yet, they have closed a shitload. Our government also keeps our dependency on foreign oil to a high level for a reason.

1. To play nice nice to the ****heads the mostly want us all killed anyhow. (mideast countries)
2. Quite frankly, they believe oil is the devil and this administration wants no part of it. They want other resources. I agree, but, don't cut your hand off before you find a different way to replace that hand.

IMO. This is just the way our government wants it. They want us all to be trained mice. Live the way THEY want us to live. Meanwhile. Less trips are taken. Meaning less people working on summer jobs because people aren't spending. Food prices sky rocked. Trucking companies are losing it all because of how fuel prices are. All a domino effect that ****s over us.

The US government ignores the resources we have. Is letting other countries drill off of our shores. While the American family gets the shaft. And, yes, retorting back to a possible reason to be pissed at the oil companies as well is I am sure they are kicking back some cash to important morons in Washington. I don't trust any of them mind you, just the way of the road boys.

It's not gonna change anytime soon. And, unfortunately as Cythim states, time to find new commuting habits, which is bullshit. This country was built around the automobile, family outings, living the dream. Not to be put in a box on a ****ing uncontrollable machine that takes me from point A to B. , with no middle.
 

Cythim

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Building around the automobile was the dumbest idea this country had. Look at Detroit, look at all of our bridges that need repair, look at current gas prices, look how American auto has been replaced by Japan. Our transportation sector is a giant fail.
 

Plymkr

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Building around the automobile was the dumbest idea this country had. Look at Detroit, look at all of our bridges that need repair, look at current gas prices, look how American auto has been replaced by Japan. Our transportation sector is a giant fail.

Sorry, that is the government and the unlimited amounts of regulations they throw and threw on the auto industry.
Sending companies over seas so Japan could be number one.

Course, America wasn't only "built" around the automobile.

You go ahead and ride a horse to work then. I will drive on by, warm in my rig, while you are freezing your ass off,cursing my truck. lol
 

Cythim

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Sorry, that is the government and the unlimited amounts of regulations they throw and threw on the auto industry.
Sending companies over seas so Japan could be number one.

Course, America wasn't only "built" around the automobile.

You go ahead and ride a horse to work then. I will drive on by, warm in my rig, while you are freezing your ass off,cursing my truck. lol

I have a one mile "commute" to work. You go ahead and drive buy, I'll spend the money I'm saving on a nice vacation.
 

pdom

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It's also the price of having the American-dream suburban house with 4 bdr/3bath on a 1/2 acre lot. Americans picked their poison.

We bitch about gas price, but would we rather live in smaller, denser quarters like the Finnish, British or Japanese? Their gas prices are double and triple ours, but they don't really care because they bike, walk, public transport it everywhere.

...Can't have it both ways...
 
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It's also the price of having the American-dream suburban house with 4 bdr/3bath on a 1/2 acre lot. Americans picked their poison.

We bitch about gas price, but would we rather live in smaller, denser quarters like the Finnish, British or Japanese? Their gas prices are double and triple ours, but they don't really care because they bike, walk, public transport it everywhere.

...Can't have it both ways...

Ten years ago gas was about 1.50 a gallon.

You can have it both ways. Just eliminate the dependency on foreign oil, and regulate the oil speculation that is the driving force behind these prices.
 

Plymkr

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Ten years ago gas was about 1.50 a gallon.

You can have it both ways. Just eliminate the dependency on foreign oil, and regulate the oil speculation that is the driving force behind these prices.

Bingo.


These bullshit prices are based on fear and speculation. Oh yeah, AND GREED!! lol
 
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