I don't know who asked that question, but he must be f***ed in the brain
obviously yes...because petrol like gold is priced at market price and not at the price which existed earlier.
The average petrol price in 1950 in UK was about $36 per gallon. However, the prices have kept fluctuating over the years but there has been a significant price of the same.
The price depends on the petrol supplier, how much they charge for the company who owns the petrol station. It also depends on how much of a profit the companies want to make. Say if sainsburys had a petrol station somewhere, prices 110p per litre, they could be making 10p profit off the petrol suppliers price which could be 100p per litre.
It varies depending on how far the petrol station is from the refinery and from other competing petrol stations, but the cheapest is around £1.16 a litre (£5.28 per UK gallon - around $10.50).
There was no network of petrol (gas) supply points in 1800s. Cars were only invented in Europe in 1885, so the advent of motor transport (and petrol stations) was not until 1900s.
Monday, Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday Saturday and Sunday. Stations most frequently change their prices right after they take delivery of fresh fuel, but they may change it any time during the day (sometimes they will change it more than once during the day). There is no particular day that the price gets changed - as the first poster stated - it can change any day - seven days a week.
The changing of petrol price affects the rate of inflation. When petrol price increases, it follows that the cost of production and transportation of most goods also increase.
The gas companies see that there is an increase coming in their next purchases of crude oil and they are building capital in advance to make those purchases. In the United States, gas stations can change their prices only once a day. (On interstates, it's just once a week.) Stations would probably change their prices even sooner than the next day if they were allowed to legally.
in the 1958 britain's petrol had didn't price than now, because many the people of Britain didnt now about petrol and their use...........
In 1984 the price per litre of fuel was 50¢.
good
The petrol price in pretoria differs from that it Durban because petrol station owners have to pay a different price than from pretoria because the two have to pay different amounts of money from exportation