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The Russian invasion of Ukraine has driven up oil and other commodity prices in many countries, with gasoline prices turning into a topic of discussion around the world. However, as Statista's Katharina Buchholz details below, as taxes are making up a big chunk of the gas price in the majority of industrialized nations, countries taxing gasoline at lower rates will still see lower gas prices in comparison. One example of this is the United States.

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/how-gas-prices-compare-around-world

LARGE IMAGE - https://cdn.statcdn.com/Infographic/images/normal/5316.jpeg

1 Gallon = 3.7854 Liters

How Gas Prices Compare Around The World

Tyler Durden's Photo
by Tyler Durden
Thursday, Mar 24, 2022 - 03:15 AM

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has driven up oil and other commodity prices in many countries, with gasoline prices turning into a topic of discussion around the world. However, as Statista's Katharina Buchholz details below, as taxes are making up a big chunk of the gas price in the majority of industrialized nations, countries taxing gasoline at lower rates will still see lower gas prices in comparison. One example of this is the United States.

Infographic: How Gas Prices Compare Around the World | Statista

You will find more infographics at Statista

Even at a gas price of more than $4.00 per gallon, Americans are still paying much less to fill up their cars than people in many industrialized nations, including other car-based economies like Brazil, Australia or South Africa. According to website Global Gas Prices, the latter two nations were already paying upwards of $5.00 for a gallon, while prices in Brazil were approaching $4.94.

Europe has some of the highest gasoline prices in the world. Most of Western Europe was paying upwards of $6.00 for a gallon of gas as of March 14, with some of the highest prices being charged in the Netherlands, Finland, Germany, Italy and Norway. Germany was the most expensive major European economy in terms of gas prices most recently, as a gallon was going for $9.12. Norway is an outlier among oil producing countries as it taxes gasoline at a premium. The country bases lots of its wealth on oil but has for many years pursued a plan to make its own economy independent of the fossil fuel.

Other oil producers have gone the opposite route, offering gasoline to its citizens for less than the price of bottled water. The most drastic examples for this are Venezuela, Libya and Iran, where gasoline only costs a couple of cents per gallon.

The most expensive gallon of gas included in the ranking, however, was being sold in Hong Kong at $10.90, which would typically cause filling up even a small car to break the $100 barrier. East Asia was the priciest part of the world for gas after Europe, with prices high in India, China, Japan, South Korea and Thailand – all of which are major oil consumers, but not producers. Deep pockets are also needed in a few countries where weak government or trade structures have led to a hike in prices, like in Zimbabwe and the Central African Republic.

World regions with cheap gas prices included North Africa and the Middle East as well as in Central Asia and Russia. In Algeria, for example, gas costs only around $1.20 per gallon, while in Russia, the price was approximately $1.60.

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Any country that is a net exporter should be insulated from a world price built on competition for exports. It’s politicians, oligarchs and shareholders that developed the system to  line pockets. Time for a little different kind of trading that takes a country resource and shares it with the public. Then and only then you seek permission to sell to the world, keeping in mind future generations and their demands. 

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