Page added on May 16, 2012
Political revolt against fiscal austerity underscores laws governing energy and money to which European leaders should pay more heed: Neither can be created from nothing.
No one, not even politicians, can create energy. All people can do is make available energy useful.
People can, in a sense, create money. Individuals and corporations can earn profits. And governments can increase the amount of currency in circulation.
In neither case, however, does the money come from nothing. Generating profits expends some combination of land, labor, and capital. Raising money supply, unless compensated by productivity gains, lowers currency value.
Problems arise when governments act as though they can bring energy and money into being as acts of political will.
This has happened in Europe with calamitous results.
Governments have accumulated precarious levels of debt and are raising tax rates that already are high.
At the same time, most European governments have subsidized renewable energy, especially wind and solar power, heavily. In some countries, governments assume the financial burden; in others, governments put the load on energy consumers.
Either way, the subsidies impose economic costs. And the costs arrive as tax rates rise.
Economies have trouble growing under conditions such as these. And when economic growth becomes torpid or nonexistent, tax collections suffer, keeping governments in fiscal jeopardy.
Europe thus finds itself in a double helix of economic and fiscal spirals as populations resist cuts in the lavish state services they’ve come to expect.
In France and Greece this month, voters scuttled leaders who had asked for sacrifice in the interest of state fiscal health. Media reports portrayed the development a revolt against austerity.
Yet what hardship would there be if European countries took to logical conclusion the process many have begun already of curbing state sponsorship of energy that’s politically fashionable but economically unsound?
Having fallen for the delusion that public expenditure creates energy, Europe now faces a choice: Rationalize energy ambitions, or find some way to create money out of nothing.
6 Comments on "Energy delusions aggravate European economic problems"
DC on Wed, 16th May 2012 10:27 pm
What a load of self-severing BS, comeing form the heavily subsidized industry in human history, the oil and gas cartel.
Nice try though, Oil and Gas Urinal. Stick to what you do best, Enviromental destruction, makeing people sick, overheating the planet, corrupting govts and so on. Blameing the recession in the EU on renewable power…naw…outside your specialty.
Cloud9 on Wed, 16th May 2012 11:59 pm
A lot of oil has been exchanged for piles of paper. That may have been on of the greatest cons in history.
BillT on Thu, 17th May 2012 4:54 am
While there is still some resources that can be plundered to make the elites even more wealthy, it will continue only until they become too expensive for the consumer to afford. Even Henry Ford knew that he had yo pay his employees enough so that they could buy his products.
The above article is nothing more than an ad for big gas and higher prices/profits.
Kenz300 on Thu, 17th May 2012 1:24 pm
The oil and coal industries are doing their best to try to limit any alternatives. The oil industry loves it when oil prices spike. They make huge windfall profits. It is time to transition to alternatives energy sources. Wind, solar, wave energy, geothermal and second generation biofuels made from algae, cellulose and waste are the future.
We need a choice at the pump. The monopoly on transportation fuels needs to end. Bring on the electric, flex-fuel, hybrid, CNG, LNG and hydrogen fueled vehicles.
Wind Power Universe on Thu, 17th May 2012 6:33 pm
Make it so. Wishes are horses and now beggars may ride.
Bugger their bleeding austerity. The wind is free to all, and blows away all doubts and economic concerns.
BillT on Fri, 18th May 2012 1:28 am
The wind may be free but it is fickle and the means to capture it still requires oil powered machines at many levels. So, the answer is not going to come from renewables that require metals or plastic in their manufacture.