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17 answers

The 9/10ths of a cent is taxation. All gasoline sells for that because it is the federal taxes imposed on gasoline that have the 9/10ths attached to them.

Gasoline sells for whole cents per gallon all the way from the refinery to the retail station. Once the tax is applied, that is when you see the 9/10ths added on.

How do I know? I work for one of the largest oil companies in the world, managing gasoline inventories all over the country. We ledger our gallons in whole cents and bill the station in whole cents. The station sells you gasoline in whole cents, but taxes you according to the schedule set up by the federal, state, county and local governments.

2007-09-14 05:39:27 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I thnikk this is a holdover from the 1930s, when fractions of a cent were a significant part of the price of gasoline. For example, if gas cost 8 cents per gallon, then a 1 cent increase is a 12.5% increase. The pumps allowed pricing in .1 cent increments. The habit stuck, just like most goods have prices ending in 99 cents. The sellers have no particular incentive to change.

2007-09-16 09:51:42 · answer #2 · answered by Charles R 1 · 0 0

peculiar pricing, this is a advertising and marketing ploy. How gasoline stations smash out with including a 10th of a cent on there is baffling. a minimum of with $2.ninety 9 gasoline you're nonetheless a cent wanting $3. With $2.999 gasoline you're particularly there. it particularly is purely a trick to make it seem extra low value by way of fact once you're saying gasoline at $2.509 are you going to declare that it costs $2.50 or $2.fifty one? particular, it particularly is a lot closer to $2.fifty one, yet maximum folk will drop the 9 and think of that this is a penny extra low value than that's. Sneaky, no?

2016-12-13 08:22:26 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Because gas stations want you to think that the gas is one cent cheaper (which is a lot of money when it comes to gasoline)... Because that .9 of cent rounds up to the next cent, which is the actual (higher) price.

2007-09-13 11:15:17 · answer #4 · answered by Catboy 3 · 0 1

Just an xtra 9/10 of a cent more in their pocket.

2007-09-13 11:47:50 · answer #5 · answered by FORD-MAN 5 · 0 1

Gas prices are controlled by governmetal laws and regulations. As an advertising gimick, they price to the max of course, but doesn't 3.99 sound less than 4.00? Restaurants do it too, a sandwich for .99 sounds so much less than 1.00.

2007-09-13 11:12:14 · answer #6 · answered by sj w 3 · 0 1

It's a profit thing! You see 2.89 in large print, but you're paying an extra cent into someone's pocket. It's just to make it look a penny cheaper.

2007-09-13 11:11:38 · answer #7 · answered by dancingcrow350 2 · 0 1

So they make 9/10 of a cent on every gallon. They sell millions of gallons of fuel, so that's more money. When people look at the sign, they see "1.999" but say "1.99" per gallon. They're actually paying more than they think, but subconsciously.

2007-09-13 11:09:53 · answer #8 · answered by treseuropean 6 · 0 2

Just a sales gimmick, like when they say something is 99 cents [under a dollar].

2007-09-13 11:11:17 · answer #9 · answered by WC 7 · 0 1

Psychological pricing...$19.95...$9.95...etc. It is less then the next denomination. I agree that with gas, it really is just stupid, but they have been doing it forever.

2007-09-13 11:11:23 · answer #10 · answered by NY PTK 4 · 0 1

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