Yup! People constantly compare nominal oil prices across decades like those dollars are interchangeable. They are not. $50 oil in 2000 is roughly $90 to $95 oil today, so when people say “oil was only $50 back then,” they are usually ignoring inflation and comparing apples to oranges. Historical oil prices make a lot more sense once you convert them into today’s dollars.I think that’s a pretty bold statement considering how much this industry fluctuates and we have no idea what the future holds.
One thing I will say however in regards to oil prices, it seems like people don’t factor in inflation with oil prices. Most think of the oil price 5,10,15,20 years ago and believe that number to mean the same thing today.
$50 oil in 2000 is about $94 today…
People do the same thing with gas prices. They remember paying $1.50 a gallon in 2002 and act like that would still be $1.50 in today’s money, but $1.50 in 2002 is about $2.60 today after inflation using CPI. So a lot of the “gas used to be so cheap” nostalgia is really just people comparing old nominal prices to current dollars like purchasing power never changed.