The Central Scrutinizer
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2001
- Messages
- 53,097
Not that "What oil did last year" should be a reliable guide to "What oil will do next year".
You omit speculative demand. Commodities (not just oil) have become an increasingly popular "investment category" and some prices look like speculative bubbles. As to why a speculative component would be so strong of late, there is the Frankel (Harvard) argument that low real interest rates give producers more incentive to not sell commodities, but give speculators more incentive to buy commodities.2. Decrease in demand. This will happen. But at what price? Which consumers will be the first to stop or reduce their demand? Probably the ones with the weakest currencies.
Not that "What oil did last year" should be a reliable guide to "What oil will do next year".
$135 today. $200 by Christmas?
Oil price is not this high because speculators are buying oil. If that was true the bubble would burst when the captains of the oil ships tell the speculators 'Here is your oil, what do you want us to do with it?'
Hopefully.
As oil prices rise, both businesses and individuals will become increasingly motivated conserve, to explore alternatives, perhaps even to curtail certain activities altogether. This will be a good thing, because it will mean this freight train we're all riding on will only be doing maybe sixty miles an hour when it goes completely off the rails instead of the seventy-five miles an hour it's doing now.Can you (or someone) explain to me, in small words that I can understand, just how the hell it's supposed to be a "good" thing for the price of oil to go through the friggin roof?
I don't begin to claim to understand economics, beyond my own very meager personal finances.
Can you (or someone) explain to me, in small words that I can understand, just how the hell it's supposed to be a "good" thing for the price of oil to go through the friggin roof?
Here's what little I know, and probably illustrative of why I don't understand:
1. Approximately every damned thing in the world is either made with, or needs oil.
2. Every single service or product I use both at work and in my personal life has to be transported by some sort of oil-using appliance.
3. I drive 60 miles a day round trip to & from work. I'd happily use public transportation, as soon as someone would build some.
5. Home: They don't just automatically start paying me more money even though I am suddenly paying a shaite-load more just for the privilege of driving to work, not to mention the increase in food and electricity costs.
Not everybody is making $50k+ a year and driving aircraft carriers on wheels. Not every company that employs people is Exxon-Mobile. So how does it "help" when it becomes just that much harder for business and individuals to survive financially?
I don't begin to claim to understand economics, beyond my own very meager personal finances.
Can you (or someone) explain to me, in small words that I can understand, just how the hell it's supposed to be a "good" thing for the price of oil to go through the friggin roof?
Here's what little I know, and probably illustrative of why I don't understand:
1. Approximately every damned thing in the world is either made with, or needs oil.
2. Every single service or product I use both at work and in my personal life has to be transported by some sort of oil-using appliance.
3. I drive 60 miles a day round trip to & from work. I'd happily use public transportation, as soon as someone would build some.
4. Work: Shipping is our highest expense after payroll. We have two choices - charge higher prices to recoup the costs and risk losing business, OR charge the same and put employees out of work. Hooray.
5. Home: They don't just automatically start paying me more money even though I am suddenly paying a shaite-load more just for the privilege of driving to work, not to mention the increase in food and electricity costs.
Not everybody is making $50k+ a year and driving aircraft carriers on wheels. Not every company that employs people is Exxon-Mobile. So how does it "help" when it becomes just that much harder for business and individuals to survive financially?
Quite a few governments subsidise the price of petrol at the expense of public debt and therefore future generations (such as India) and the effect you speak of is still moving fast in the opposite direction.Higher oil (and by extension higher gas) prices gets more cars off the road, and more people onto subways and trains. It means people will move closer in instead of farther away. Given enough time, of course.
It just is what it is. It causes a bigger transfer of wealth from consumers to producers. That does not--by itself--make everybody net better-off, so it is not "good" in dispassionate economic parlance.Can you (or someone) explain to me, in small words that I can understand, just how the hell it's supposed to be a "good" thing for the price of oil to go through the friggin roof?
Here's what little I know, and probably illustrative of why I don't understand:
1. Approximately every damned thing in the world is either made with, or needs oil.
2. Every single service or product I use both at work and in my personal life has to be transported by some sort of oil-using appliance.
3. I drive 60 miles a day round trip to & from work. I'd happily use public transportation, as soon as someone would build some.
4. Work: Shipping is our highest expense after payroll. We have two choices - charge higher prices to recoup the costs and risk losing business, OR charge the same and put employees out of work. Hooray.
5. Home: They don't just automatically start paying me more money even though I am suddenly paying a shaite-load more just for the privilege of driving to work, not to mention the increase in food and electricity costs.
It doesn't help and the immediate effect is to subtract from consumer spending and profit margins outside of energy. Others have mentioned that expensive oil makes alternative power sources more attractive in comparison, and to the extent that alternatives may have less severe negative externalities (undesirable spillover effects onto everyone else) then the relative promotion of alternatives (energy sources and economic behaviour) can be a "good" thing.Not everybody is making $50k+ a year and driving aircraft carriers on wheels. Not every company that employs people is Exxon-Mobile. So how does it "help" when it becomes just that much harder for business and individuals to survive financially?
Quite a few governments subsidise the price of petrol at the expense of public debt and therefore future generations (such as India) and the effect you speak of is still moving fast in the opposite direction.
"Things tend to work out best when people have to live with [finance] the costs of their own behaviour"--Steven E Landsburg, from "More Sex is Safer Sex" (Incidentally this is a truly great recent book about economics suitable for a lay reader. I like it very much)
Which is exactly what is not happening now. The rich, who have a disproportionate influence on economic and political power, find the recent oil prices rises personally no more annoying than a flea bite. Those with little money simply have to go without.
That has nothing to do with the statement in the quote. You are simply stating that rich people can buy more, which is not relevant IMO.Which is exactly what is not happening now. The rich, who have a disproportionate influence on economic and political power, find the recent oil prices rises personally no more annoying than a flea bite. Those with little money simply have to go without.