Electricity (measured in USD/kWh) is an important economic indicator for US, providing insights into structural trends, policy impacts, and development trajectories. This metric is widely used by researchers, analysts, and policymakers to monitor economic conditions and inform decision-making. In US, Electricity reflects the interplay of domestic policies, global market forces, and long-term demographic and technological changes. Tracking this indicator over time reveals patterns of growth, volatility, and structural transformation that shape the country's economic outlook. Access to reliable, timely data is essential for evidence-based analysis, whether for academic research, investment strategy, or public policy evaluation. The most recent data point shows 0.19 USD/kWh as of 2026-02-01. This dataset spans 1978–2026, covering 566 annual observations. Data is sourced from EIA and updated regularly on EconDash. Use EconDash's interactive chart to explore Electricity data, apply custom date ranges, and benchmark US against peer economies.
| Indicator | Electricity |
|---|---|
| Country | US |
| Category | Сырьевые энергетика |
| Unit | USD/kWh |
| Source | EIA |
| Frequency | annual |
| Time range | 1978–2026 (566 observations) |
| Interactive chart | View on EconDash |
| API access | EconDash API documentation |
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