Publication | Closed Access
Gasoline Price Differences: Taxes, Pollution Regulations, Mergers, Market Power, and Market Conditions
102
Citations
21
References
2007
Year
Wholesale Gasoline PricesLawEnvironmental EconomicsGasoline Price DifferencesEnergy TaxationEnergy TradeEconomic AnalysisPollution RegulationsTax PolicyAntitrust EnforcementEconomicsPublic PolicyPrice FormationRegulatory EconomicsEconomic PolicyEnergy PolicyPrice DiscriminationEconometricsCrude OilBusinessCommodity Price IndexMarket PowerInterfuel Substitution
Abstract Retail and wholesale gasoline prices vary over time and across geographic locations due to differences in government policies and other factors that affect demand, costs, and market power. We use a two-equation, reduced-form model to determine the relative importance of these various factors using panel data for 48 states over nine years. We find that the variation in the price of crude oil has been virtually the only major factor contributing to gasoline price variations during the 1990s. Tax variations and mergers contribute substantially more to geographic price differentials than do price discrimination, cost factors, or pollution controls.
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