Yeah, relative income/purchasing power is sometimes forgotten in our focus on prices. If the unemployment rate goes up and/or wages creep downward, the effect is higher price for gasoline, etc. even if nominal price stays the same. If unemployment goes up drastically, even $1.50/gal could be expensive gasoline.
It's called the Purchasing Power Parity and it is available @ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purchasing_power_parity.

If things continued in terms of economic growth, by 2030 or so many countries will have passed us in PPP.