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WSWS : News
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America
US truck drivers squeezed by soaring diesel prices
By Lawrence Standford
18 March 2008
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The cost of diesel gasoline in the US soared to historic highs
over the past several weeks, threatening independent truck drivers
with financial ruin and forcing a sharp hike in transportation
costs, which reverberates throughout the economy.
According to the most recent reports, the national average
cost of dieselused mainly in trucks, farm equipment, and
other machineryis now a record $4 a gallon. Last year, the
average price was only $2.75 a gallon.
The cost of gasoline, used in most automobiles in the US, has
also risen substantially and now averages $3.28 a gallon. With
the spring and summer seasons coming, a period when fuel prices
generally rise, some analysts predict that gasoline prices will
go up to $3.50 or $4 a gallon by the July 4 holiday period.
The entire transportation industry relies on diesel fuel, including
trains and cargo ships, but the impact on trucking is particularly
severe. The economic slowdown has already led to a decline in
freight shipments and a glut of available trucks, which has driven
rates paid to independent drivers below the cutthroat levels of
2002. At the same time, the ripple effect of high fuel prices
on manufacturing, production, and consumption is booting inflationary
pressures everywhere.
Diesel fuel currently accounts for nearly 28 percent of the
total fuel used in the US and nearly 63 percent of fuel used in
Europe. As oil companies closed refineries to boost profits in
the past period, reduced refinery capacity has been unable to
keep up with demand. In the short term, diesel prices have risen
with the rise in the price of oil, driven in large part by a flood
of investors into the commodity markets.
The dramatic diesel price increases threaten to ruin many independent
truck drivers, including the author of this article, who is also
an independent owner/operator. During the past six years, I have
seen my monthly fuel price average jump from a base of $1.37 a
gallon in 2002 to the present $4 a gallonthat is, nearly
300 percent.
The rapid rise in fuel prices means that independent truck
owner-operators, or those who run a small fleet of trucks, are
being driven to bankruptcy. Fuel surcharges, which are added on
to freight rates, are not always guaranteed and never keep up
with these rapidly rising costs. The only recourse for many is
to shut down their trucks or fall further behind their other fixed
costs.
A flat tire in the course of one week can mean the difference
between a profit and a loss.
In real terms, at least 50 percent of truck-generated income
is going right back into the fuel tanks. Factor in maintenance,
and that bill can approach 75 percent. Thousands of operators
have been forced to look for shortcuts, put off critical maintenance
procedures, or park their rigs altogether because they cannot
earn a living.
There has been a sharp increase in truck repossession as well.
Repossessor Nassau Management reported a 110 percent increase
in 2007 over 2006. In an indication that truckers are parking
their rigs rather than being on the road and out of reach, repossession
companies are finding it easier to repossess drivers trucks.
It used to take weeks, now it takes days or hours,
stated Edward Castagna, president of Nassau Management.
Rumors are already spreading of a nationwide truck strike,
as thousands of drivers have been forced into bankruptcy or had
their trucks repossessed.
Between 1974 and 1983, when oil prices quadrupled during the
oil embargo, there were at least three major national trucking
strikes in the US. The largest and most violent was in 1979, lasting
for over two weeks. The Carter administration responded to the
oil crisis by deregulating the oil industry. Carter also pushed
for the mandatory fuel surcharge legislation that exists to this
day.
At that time, it was estimated that 20 percent of the nations
500,000 truckers were independents. Today, approximately 9 percent
of 3.4 million truckers are independents according to the US Labor
Department. Deregulation has resulted in depressed freight rates
and a bonanza for large trucking companies that now dominate the
industry. The largest companies pay for fuel in bulk, and purchase
thousands of tractors at a time. They can weather a fuel crisis
by raising transportation rates when forced to.
In contrast, many independents drivers are dependent on freight
brokers. These are middlemen who match a driver with a shipper
one load at a time, and take a sizeable cut for themselves. Landstar
System, one of the largest freight brokers in the country, brokered
loads totaling $881.57 million in 2007, more than double the revenue
four years earlier.
A recent article in the Associated Press noted, Truckers
complain that the brokerage system is unregulated and lacks transparency:
They know what theyre getting paid, but they dont
know what the shippers are paying the brokers. For example,
the AP wrote, A load traveling 800 miles that cost a shipper
nearly $3,000 to send may pay the trucker $1,000, out of which
the trucker would pay all expenses including fuel and insurance.
In the same article, a driver was reported to have seen his
take home pay drop from $50,000 a year to $11,000 in 2007. The
reason: his fuel costs skyrocketed. During the previous eight
months he spent $64,000 on fuel.
Recent oil and gas price increases have been driven primarily
by speculation and the fall of the US dollar. Crude oil futures
are now well above $100 a barrel, once considered an extremely
unlikely circumstance.
Many analysts have attributed the rising oil prices to the
weakness of the dollar, as international investors are buying
oil shares to hedge against dollar depreciation. Interest rate
cuts by the Federal Reserve have further weakened the dollar and
helped fuel the rise in the cost of oil.
See Also:
Gold and oil prices soar, dollar slumps,
Carlyle Group fund collapses
[14 March 2008]
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