Berliner Boersenzeitung - Americans ponder the cost of 'defending freedom' in Ukraine

EUR -
AED 3.818175
AFN 72.797719
ALL 98.449296
AMD 411.004828
ANG 1.872955
AOA 948.054394
ARS 1066.311715
AUD 1.668113
AWG 1.87116
AZN 1.768965
BAM 1.954396
BBD 2.098393
BDT 124.19081
BGN 1.955581
BHD 0.392145
BIF 3072.59335
BMD 1.039533
BND 1.410387
BOB 7.196831
BRL 6.437413
BSD 1.039254
BTN 88.509435
BWP 14.374677
BYN 3.400558
BYR 20374.855355
BZD 2.090099
CAD 1.497624
CDF 2983.460647
CHF 0.935829
CLF 0.037222
CLP 1027.163148
CNY 7.585372
CNH 7.588908
COP 4586.421522
CRC 527.721006
CUC 1.039533
CUP 27.547636
CVE 110.185868
CZK 25.132789
DJF 185.06709
DKK 7.460721
DOP 63.054716
DZD 140.566631
EGP 52.908195
ERN 15.593002
ETB 132.294989
FJD 2.411977
FKP 0.823292
GBP 0.829486
GEL 2.920682
GGP 0.823292
GHS 15.277028
GIP 0.823292
GMD 74.846661
GNF 8978.551858
GTQ 8.007249
GYD 217.423852
HKD 8.074363
HNL 26.398042
HRK 7.456476
HTG 135.892406
HUF 411.386519
IDR 16854.007582
ILS 3.816247
IMP 0.823292
INR 88.537577
IQD 1361.422265
IRR 43751.368531
ISK 145.098247
JEP 0.823292
JMD 162.233488
JOD 0.737345
JPY 163.308108
KES 134.359917
KGS 90.43918
KHR 4168.006655
KMF 484.552483
KPW 935.579512
KRW 1516.736442
KWD 0.320353
KYD 0.866078
KZT 542.14065
LAK 22741.667577
LBP 93065.16323
LKR 307.719005
LRD 189.144162
LSL 19.151746
LTL 3.069472
LVL 0.628803
LYD 5.103335
MAD 10.455991
MDL 19.13226
MGA 4899.481331
MKD 61.484688
MMK 3376.364052
MNT 3532.334482
MOP 8.317127
MRU 41.38328
MUR 48.930718
MVR 16.006255
MWK 1802.105779
MXN 20.946609
MYR 4.664402
MZN 66.430063
NAD 19.151746
NGN 1609.062836
NIO 38.242535
NOK 11.851383
NPR 141.615296
NZD 1.844195
OMR 0.400229
PAB 1.039254
PEN 3.876416
PGK 4.215972
PHP 60.790857
PKR 289.562045
PLN 4.272583
PYG 8113.173348
QAR 3.788779
RON 4.974478
RSD 116.96726
RUB 103.956844
RWF 1439.366288
SAR 3.902853
SBD 8.714986
SCR 14.844265
SDG 625.277692
SEK 11.524705
SGD 1.413157
SHP 0.823292
SLE 23.699822
SLL 21798.499544
SOS 593.973425
SRD 36.51156
STD 21516.243325
SVC 9.093469
SYP 2611.859198
SZL 19.14625
THB 35.502128
TJS 11.353846
TMT 3.648762
TND 3.309823
TOP 2.434695
TRY 36.647089
TTD 7.05893
TWD 33.975901
TZS 2515.671135
UAH 43.68063
UGX 3819.257117
USD 1.039533
UYU 46.496607
UZS 13408.370487
VES 53.614006
VND 26445.730624
VUV 123.415492
WST 2.87201
XAF 655.486248
XAG 0.035243
XAU 0.000398
XCD 2.809391
XDR 0.796728
XOF 655.486248
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.273179
ZAR 19.359023
ZMK 9357.102525
ZMW 28.761344
ZWL 334.729342
  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    59.8

    -1.17%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0200

    7.25

    -0.28%

  • RELX

    0.1200

    45.59

    +0.26%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    11.65

    -0.77%

  • AZN

    1.2800

    66.63

    +1.92%

  • BCC

    -0.5100

    122.24

    -0.42%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    59.02

    +0.88%

  • CMSC

    0.0420

    23.902

    +0.18%

  • GSK

    0.4600

    34.06

    +1.35%

  • RIO

    0.5900

    59.23

    +1%

  • VOD

    -0.0200

    8.37

    -0.24%

  • JRI

    0.0400

    12.1

    +0.33%

  • BTI

    -0.0200

    36.22

    -0.06%

  • BCE

    -0.3200

    22.84

    -1.4%

  • CMSD

    -0.0100

    23.55

    -0.04%

  • BP

    0.1500

    28.75

    +0.52%

Americans ponder the cost of 'defending freedom' in Ukraine
Americans ponder the cost of 'defending freedom' in Ukraine

Americans ponder the cost of 'defending freedom' in Ukraine

President Joe Biden has told Americans to prepare for the "costs" of Washington's pushback against Russian aggression in Ukraine, but truck driver Jeremy Rakestraw wonders if he hasn't paid enough already.

Text size:

He decided to sell his truck when its monthly fuel bill more than doubled to $17,000, and though he's back on the road towing cargo in the vehicle of a company that covers his gas, the high inflation Americans have faced over the past year continues to eat into his pay.

"Nobody is home using my electricity and gas, and it's still going up," Rakestraw said as he sat in his idling 18-wheeler at a truck stop in Jessup, Maryland, 31 hours from his Salt Lake City home and two-and-a-half hours from the New Jersey town where cargo was waiting for him to pick up.

As for Biden, "I don't think he's doing nearly enough," Rakestraw said.

Such is the dilemma the US president faced as he prepared to announce new sanctions against Moscow on Thursday, after warning a nation weary from months of massive leaps in consumer prices that "defending freedom will have costs for us as well."

The tensions with Moscow have already played a large part in pushing up fuel prices. Yet some who make their living roaming America's roads also recognize the need for Washington to take action to stop or at least limit a bloody war -- even if it could push gas prices up even higher.

"For every action there is equal and opposite reaction. They have to do something," said Abdullahi Ali, a taxi driver waiting for a fare outside Union Station in Washington, where passenger traffic is far more scarce than before the pandemic.

He spoke early Wednesday, hours before Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine.

- 'Risk premium' -

For months, rising costs for everything from fuel to food have worn Americans down, making them feel less content with Biden's leadership and unenthusiastic about the economy even as wages rise and millions of people who lost their jobs when Covid-19 broke out return to work.

The University of Michigan index tracking consumer sentiment plunged this month to its lowest level in 10 years while the average gallon of gas currently goes for $3.53, about a dollar more than before the pandemic, according to the American Automobile Association.

"Americans are already paying a little bit of a risk premium, if you will, simply because the temperature has risen" with Russia, said Patrick De Haan, head of petroleum analysis at GasBuddy.

Yet the United States is also a major oil producer, and Keith Wood, a truck driver waiting to set out from Jessup, wondered why events far beyond its borders would bleed into what he pays at the pump.

"We're supposed to be self-sufficient so I don't know why the price would go up," he said.

- Energy independence -

Oil is traded on a global market, meaning even though the United States is a major exporter of crude, that doesn't necessarily offer drivers relief when prices spike.

And spike they did on Thursday. After Putin overnight ordered a major Russian military operation against Ukraine, European and US benchmark crudes breached the $100-per-barrel mark for the first time since 2014.

While Biden has promised to take steps to offset price increases, De Haan said, "No president can upend change in the global market."

Moscow understands that well, and De Haan predicted it will use the threat of cutting off access to its own ample production of oil to try to get Western countries to back off when it comes to Ukraine.

"It would shoot themselves in the foot if they limit oil exports but even the talk of it could inspire some kind of breakthrough that goes in Russia's favor," he said.

The prices of gas and diesel are among the most prominent indicators of the cost of living in the world's largest economy, and voters have been known to take out their frustration over high costs on presidents and their political parties.

Dipson Abass' earnings as a taxi driver in Washington have already suffered as prices rose. Yet as he pondered the situation in Ukraine, he expressed a willingness to bear whatever consequences the sanctions bring.

"Price of gas is nothing compared with human life," he said. "So I will just say whatever sanction they can pass onto Russia, let it go."

(G.Gruner--BBZ)