Fuel retailers are charging unnecessarily high prices for petrol, the motoring organisation says.
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Scooped by
Graham Watson
onto Microeconomics: IB Economics December 3, 2021 2:48 AM
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The RAC have accused petrol retailers of profiteering as petrol prices stayed high, despite significant falls in global oil prices. In particular, they suggest that supermarket petrol may have even increased in price at the same time that oil prices fell.
Well, it's exactly what economic theory would predict. The oligopolistic market structure that characterises the industry often leads to price stability, and as Keynes suggested wages and prices are sticky in a downwards direction.
Equally, petrol retailers forward buy petrol so a fall in oil prices is unlikely to be matched by a simultaneous fall in prices at the pump.
Lastly, I'd argue that the RAC can't have it both ways - during the recent fuel crisis prices could have risen significantly higher than they did and yet petrol retailers didn't exploit the opportunity to profiteer to the extent that they could have done.