Gas prices: ‘We realize there’s no silver bullet,’ White House advisor says

In This Article:

Gene Sperling, senior advisor to President Biden, joins Yahoo Finance Live to discuss how the White House is responding to soaring gas prices and the possibility of a gas tax holiday.

Video Transcript

JOE BIDEN: My message is simple, to the companies running gas stations and setting those prices at the pump, this is a time of war, global peril, Ukraine. These are not normal times. Bring down the price you are charging at the pump to reflect the cost you are paying for the product.

- That was President Biden pressuring oil giants and calling on Congress today to approve a three-month gas tax holiday. National average gas prices dipping this week below $5 a gallon in its first weekly decline that we've seen since April. Joining us now to discuss this, we want to bring in Senior Advisor to President Biden Gene Sperling. Gene, thanks so much for taking the time to join us today.

GENE SPERLING: Thank you. Thanks for having me.

- So let's start first with President Biden. He's under some pressure here to provide some relief at the pump. He's calling on Congress to suspend the gas tax first. How big of a difference is this going to make for our individual viewer out there?

GENE SPERLING: Well, the President called for three things today. And I think the combination can be significant. One was a three-month holiday in the $0.18 federal gas tax. Two was for states that have experienced the surge in surpluses with the growth since the American Rescue Plan to also suspend their gas taxes. Some of those are larger, up to $0.30.

And then he also called on the oil refineries to do more to bring on capacity. They brought down over a million barrels of capacity over the last two years. What can they do to bring that back and to ensure that when we are seeing drops in oil, drops in the gas tax, that those benefits are being passed on at the gas pump?

And the President noted at the end that oil's fallen $10 in the last week. We should have seen a $0.25 drop in gas prices at the pump. Instead, it was a few cents, maybe a nickel, but not nearly as much as it should be. And that's very important as we do a gas tax holiday that that $0.18 be passed on directly to consumers.

- Well, Gene, what you just said there about the refineries has pressed on some of these big oil companies to up their refining capacity. In June, they were running at 95%, close to max capacity. So how much wiggle room is there really there?

GENE SPERLING: I think there's more than that suggests because you have to remember they took down a million barrels a day. 800,000 in 2020 before President Biden came. So there's been about a million.