I keep my receipts being somewhat of a data hound. Fueling up the other day I noticed that a gallon of premium gas was $3.92 USD - perilously close to the four dollar mark. I decided to graph my petrol receipts for the last month.

It has been a rapid and bumpy climb; a trendline 50c increase in less than thirty days. The high amount of inflation is real especially if I am noticing it each time I fill up. We aren't quite to the level that the Cunning Realist notes of high inflation economies (ie order two as the second will be more than the first), but there is no price stability if I am paying more each time I go to the pump to fuel up. Is it a failure of the federal reserve or the energy market? (more)





Despite appearances my car is pretty easy on petrol averaging 23 to 24 mpg in commuter driving and nearly 30 mpg when on the highway. Better than a family sedan, most smaller cars and certainly an SUV. The issue isn't the gas price itself, it is the rabid inflation that has come with gas prices recently. It was not long ago when I came to Arizona that I was paying $2.50 a gallon. 
