University of Illinois Legal Working Paper Series

University of Illinois Law and Economics Working Papers

 

Gasoline, Markets, and Regulators

Andrew P. Morriss, University of Illinois

Article comments

Forthcoming in Engage, Volume 8, Issue 3, pp. 4-13

Abstract

Rising gasoline prices have brought energy issues back to the forefront of public policy debates. Gasoline markets today are the result of almost a hundred years of conflicting regulatory policies, which have left them dangerously fragmented. In this article, I analyze that regulatory history, highlighting the unintended consequences of regulation that have pushed the United States into a series of loosely connected regional markets rather than a broad, deep national market. This fragmentation leaves the American economy is vulnerable to natural disasters, terrorist attacks, and foreign dictators in ways that it need not be. It also produces higher prices for consumers and reduced innovation by refiners.

Subject Area

Evidence, Law and Economics, Oil, Gas, and Mineral Law

Recommended Citation

Andrew P. Morriss, "Gasoline, Markets, and Regulators" (June 2007). University of Illinois Legal Working Paper Series. University of Illinois Law and Economics Working Papers. Working Paper 79.
http://law.bepress.com/uiuclwps/papers/art79

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