Drivers Shrug Off Soaring Fuel Prices, for Now

Drivers Shrug Off Soaring Fuel Prices, for Now
A delivery driver refills the pumps at an Esso petrol station amid fuel shortage in Flamstead, Saint Albans, Britain, on Sept. 29, 2021. Peter Cziborra/Reuters
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LONDON—Drivers around the world are tolerating record-high prices for road fuels, as mobility wins out for now over other spending in squeezed household budgets, data showed.

The high prices have not yet breached the pain threshold for drivers in major demand centers. But that might change once U.S. drivers have to pay more than $6 a gallon and crude oil prices exceed $140 a barrel which could happen by year-end, analysts say.