Now have the widest gap of gas prices between states.
States that the Oil Thugs can get more money out of like New York, Illinois, California they are still charging around $3 while the poor southern states like South Carolina and Missouri are under $2
12-6-2014
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102243855?__...adline|headline|story&par=yahoo&doc=102243855
America's gas price gap widens
This week, an
Oklahoma gas station posted a $1.99-per-gallon price, making it first in the nation to drop below $2. If you aren't living in the Sooner State, though, that won't mean much. That's because we haven't seen gas prices this far apart in 10 years.
First, notice how gas prices in all 50 states (mushed together in the following graphic) mostly track each other on the way up and down, according to data from
GasBuddy:
Let's take out all the mushiness and focus only on the extremesthe states with the most and least expensive average gas prices month to month. Now you see just two lines, instead of 50.
Due to differences taxes and geographic access to gas, certain states tend to be consistently higher or lower than the national average, which is normal.
Right now, however, we are seeing something new: the widest price gap in 10 years of data tracked by GasBuddy:
As of this month,
Hawaii had the most expensive gas, averaging $3.853 a gallon.
That's $1.41 more than the state with the cheapest average gas price,
Missouri, where it was $2.446. The spread tops the $1.33 gap in November, which had already been above anything we had seen before.
South Carolina or Missouri has had the best prices for consumers.
DeHaan notes that the Rocky Mountain states generally lag changes to the national average. They tend to be a month behind the country because of lower volumes and access to cheap Canadian crude. New Jersey tends to have among the lowest gas taxes, explaining its position on the list.