The US average gasoline consumption is about 73.3 billion liters per week. Calculating for 10% ethanol and converting to mass (the density and mass of ethanol are easily found) about 53.27 billion metric tonnes/year. This statistic can be easily verified by simple calculations with the available figures on sites such as http://www.epa.gov/. The 73.3 billion liters per week statistic is from 2004, and gasoline consumption has steadily increased since then. Therefore, by my estimation, the correct number should be somewhere around 77 billion liters per week.
52 percent
In 1950, the average cost of gasoline in the United States was about 27 cents per gallon. If we consider the average annual income at that time to be around $3,300, gasoline would represent approximately 1.2% of a person's income based on typical consumption. This percentage reflects the affordability of gasoline relative to income during that era.
Gasoline in 1920 was 20¢ a gallon, roughly ten percent of the average median annual income. To put it into perspective: An average 10,000 miles a year at 15 miles per gallon would cost about $113. Subtract that from the annual $1,500.00 household income.
what percent of your annual income is safe to spend on health related insurance?
The average annual price for U.S. gasoline was $2.7878
It is 14.9 percent.
2.25
75
62
0.67 percent
17% of 20,000 = 3,4007.5% of 1,200 = 903,400 + 90 = $3,490
Find the annual amount of FICA at a 7.51% rate by computing his annual salary