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Crashing the Global Economy

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Crashing the Global Economy

Postby JohnDenver » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 05:12:43

The peak oil community is 100% certain about two things:

1) World oil production will peak, and when it does, declining consumption of oil will inexorably crash the world economy. If usage of oil keeps declining, the economy must contract, recess and eventually fall into depression.

2) World usage of oil must be drastically slashed immediately. For example, Darley says (and I quote): "It does flag up the message if we're going to talk about responses and that is the main thing that the Post Carbon Institute talks about is responses, when one starts to talk about that the first thing to say, and the middle thing, and the last thing to say is to use much less, and we mean much, much less, we don't mean 5% we mean 50%, 60%, 80%, 90% reductions in the amount of energy and materials throughput, and we are very well aware of the fact that this is an enormous thing to say."

Putting two and two together, it seems clear that Julian Darley and PCI are consciously advocating that we crash the global economy.

Or is Darley, or someone here, aware of some way to reduce global energy consumption by 50 to 90%, and not send the economy into a recession/depression?
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Postby jato » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 06:10:41

Catch 22. Right or wrong Americans will wait for a crisis before changing our system.

If we change it now and conserve, we could "ration" the fossil fuels and make them last several centuries. This will never happen.
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Postby gnm » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 08:19:40

Americans don't have a monopoly on stupidity either, I'm hard pressed to think of any time humanity (or a given civilization) changed to a more difficult lifestyle, scaled back growth, etc to preserve for the future or prevent whats always percieved as a (never inmy lifetime) problem...

You can even find examples in archaeology here...

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Postby clv101 » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 08:45:18

The problem is that the amount of oil available in the future will be less than now.

If we carry on consuming as normal then the oil decline, with it does come will be very rapid indeed and cause serious problems. If on the other hand we decide today to reduce our consumption today we can be far more controlled about it. We can make smart decisions that reduce our consumption whilst not causing serious problems. The decline will still come, but not as soon. Also when it does come the still serious problems won't be quite as serious since our economy won't be as dependant.
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Postby JohnDenver » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 09:14:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clv101', 'W')e can make smart decisions that reduce our consumption whilst not causing serious problems.


How do you do that? For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems? If so, how? Because if you can do that, it should be possible to weather peak oil without serious economic problems.
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Postby Permanently_Baffled » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 09:41:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clv101', 'W')e can make smart decisions that reduce our consumption whilst not causing serious problems.


How do you do that? For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems? If so, how? Because if you can do that, it should be possible to weather peak oil without serious economic problems.


Put a 80% sales tax on gasoline but leave it tax free for industry and truckers. If 70% of gasoline consumption comes from motor cars in the US this should help.

But then this means less spending money, which means lower demand, which means fewer jobs....shit.....Keep inflation down though :)

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Postby ChickenLittle » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 10:00:40

Sadly, I don't think humans will ever willingly conserve oil/energy on an individual basis. We have become far too addicted to instant gratification and will always take the path requiring least effort.

We drive our kids to school not because there is no school bus/public transport/crossing guard, but because using these requires organisation. We prefer to defrost food in the microwave instead of letting it defrost naturally, because that takes forward planning. We blow dry our hair because air-drying takes too long, and we haven't budgeted the time. We leave our electrical goods on standby, because pressing that one extra button/flicking that one extra switch would apparently kill us.

Rationing, even before a crisis strikes, would soon teach people to budget time and resources. It would also teach people to make choices again, instead of just "having it all" and taking it for granted.
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Postby schajw » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 10:05:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('clv101', 'W')e can make smart decisions that reduce our consumption whilst not causing serious problems.


How do you do that? For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems? If so, how? Because if you can do that, it should be possible to weather peak oil without serious economic problems.


Small steps. Reinstate the 55 MPH speed limit in most places. Raise CAFE standards. Eliminate the SUV loophole. Subsidize fuel-efficient or alternative fuel vehicles (and I don't mean a stupid tax writeoff on your 1040, but a real subsidy in the price at the dealership). Instead of growing highways, grow mass transit instead. Detroit can stop building strictly gasoline powered vehicles, and instead produce diesel and flexible fuel vehicles so we can change our infrastructure to use biodiesel and E85 (85% ethanol fuel).

There are all kinds of things that can be done, but we're just not doing it. And I don't think we're likely to. There is too much special interest money in politics and inertia. I think we're going to allow ourselves to crash first.

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Postby JohnDenver » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 11:00:14

Jim: Certainly the measures you mention could help reduce crude oil consumption, but how do you know that they will not drive the economy into recession/depression?

The reason I ask is this: According to mainstream PO theory, it is impossible to maintain economic growth or even economic stability while using decreasing amounts of oil. Right? Isn't that the very reason why PO is dangerous?
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Postby Peak_Plus » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 11:18:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') think we're going to allow ourselves to crash first.

The question of how the general economy is going to handle peak oil is a question of how prepared we are for the event. We are not prepared for the event in any conceivable manner, and therefore the economy will crash. It is already too late. The first step is to synthetically raise prices in the form of taxes like the Europeans have done. If more or less of it is used, who cares? The fact is that the "free" market will already be looking for alternatives before the prices really begin to rise. The US is doing the exact oposite by trying to hold onto a cheap oil paradigm. Therefore the transition will be much the harder.

I personally to not believe that no oil = economic contraction. No energy = economic contraction in a rather long-term view, for certain. But then we need to take into consideration the real transformations waiting for us from the informational revolution which have not nearly shown their strength. Our source of energy will certainly need to be switched. Our interaction with our environment (how we use the energy) will likewise need to be changed. Neither of these things depend directly on how much oil is used or conserved. Is this the answer you're looking for?[/i]
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Postby trespam » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 11:20:33

JD: You exagerate and put the most extreme spin on everything.

PO community is not monolithic. There is no 100% certainty about all the matters you refer to. PO community provides estimates and models.

Peaking: It is almost 100% certain that oil will peak in this century. It is highly certain that it will peak before 2030. And there are good arguments for it peaking around 2007.

Economics: The world economy may very well crash without peak oil. Crash simply means asset depreciation (e.g. housing, stocks), rapid exchange rate adjustments (e.g. dollar), and production. The economy is highly leverage without PO considerations. With PO, the probabilities increase. There is also a good argument that people will not accept a change in lifestyle, which more expensive energy implies, without an initial shock.

Why all the anti-PO rhetoric and insinuations? Just the way the US government and US private sector are running up debt is increasing the likelihood of a global economic shock.
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Postby JohnDenver » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 11:26:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Permanently_Baffled', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems?


Put a 80% sales tax on gasoline but leave it tax free for industry and truckers. If 70% of gasoline consumption comes from motor cars in the US this should help.

But then this means less spending money, which means lower demand, which means fewer jobs....shit.....Keep inflation down though :)


PB, it looks like we're having problems. :cry:

That would seem to be the logical result. After all, PO is supposed to crash the economy via high fuel prices, and you're proposing higher fuel prices. It doesn't matter to the consumer whether high prices are due to government policy (to encourage consumption) or due to market pressures caused by inadequate supply.

I don't know, PB. I'm tending to the view that jacking up fuel taxes is not a viable way to reduce consumption without causing problems.
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Postby goldfishbowl42 » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 12:04:07

European Countries did not whack 75% tax on their fuel in one go. It was added a bit at a time.

So for the US to change to this you would need time to slowly raise your fuel taxes. Of course a sudden change would be damageing.

The Trouble we have now is that time is something we are rather short of.
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Postby clv101 » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 12:47:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Permanently_Baffled', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems?


Put a 80% sales tax on gasoline but leave it tax free for industry and truckers. If 70% of gasoline consumption comes from motor cars in the US this should help.

But then this means less spending money, which means lower demand, which means fewer jobs....shit.....Keep inflation down though :)


PB, it looks like we're having problems. :cry:

That would seem to be the logical result. After all, PO is supposed to crash the economy via high fuel prices, and you're proposing higher fuel prices. It doesn't matter to the consumer whether high prices are due to government policy (to encourage consumption) or due to market pressures caused by inadequate supply.

I don't know, PB. I'm tending to the view that jacking up fuel taxes is not a viable way to reduce consumption without causing problems.


If an 80% fuel tax was applied in the US then it would NOT have the same effect on the economy as if supply shortage caused prices to rise by 80%! The extra tax the government would get would allow other taxes to be reduced or even scrapped. The average Joe wouldn't be any worse off - but he would, all of a sudden have an economic incentive to drive less, buy a more efficient car etc.

No idea on the numbers but maybe an 80% European like fuel tax in the US would fund a national health service - 80% more expensive fuel but free health care?
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Postby Canuck » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 12:50:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', '
')I don't know, PB. I'm tending to the view that jacking up fuel taxes is not a viable way to reduce consumption without causing problems.


Are you just figuring out that we are between the rock and the hard place? There is no solution. We cannot reduce consumption of goods and services without without causing significant economic problems. The economy grows when the consumption of goods and services increases. The economy contracts when consumption declines.

Since oil is embedded in virtually every good and service we can't reduce oil consumption without reducing consumption across the board. Peak oil will force that reduction. Therefore peak oil will cause problems.

[/i]Putting two and two together, it seems clear that Julian Darley and PCI are consciously advocating that we crash the global economy.[/i]

Yes, they are. What's your point?

If a global crash is inevitable, it probably is better if we do it voluntarily rather than continuing to consume as fast as we can. It is better environmentally and the more we leave in the ground now, the better for the next civilization. Artificially jacking up the price of oil gives us our best chance for a soft landing. That's the argument for addressing the issue proactively. We accept a lot of pain now to avoid an even worse scenario later.

That argument failed in the 1960's and it will fail today for exactly the same reason. Conservation means less consumption. We aren't willing to consume less today to create a better tomorrow even though we know we could happily survive on a lot less.

We could happily survive consuming a lot less, but the economy can't survive it. If the economy can't survive neither can we. We don't really have any choice given the way we have organized society. It's going to be pedal to the metal over the speed bumps and into the brick wall.
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Postby backstop » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 15:41:10

JD - While I'd agree with you in saying:

"I'm tending to the view that jacking up fuel taxes is not a viable way to reduce consumption without causing problems"

I think there are ample reasons for doing so, not least being the needs to signal to the public the seriousness of the issue, as well as to raise funds for investment in a crash-program of local sustainable energy developments.

That said, as relatively exorbitant EU fuel prices have shown, only moderate cuts in consumption are achieved: being dependent on petrol, people will pay what they have to. The analogy is of attempting to deter drug addiction by raising street prices: it may reduce recruitment a bit but it doesn't really address the addicts' problem. Meanwhile it does raise the pressure to go robbing and may raise the profits/kilo for the dealers.

As the Jevon's Paradox thread details, conservation is wholly unreliable as a means to change course and appears impracticable for avoiding an economic crash. Yet if it's integrated with proactive strategies for managing re-orientation, it clearly has real tactical value.

EG., raising gas taxes by 20% pa with the income dedicated to the R,D&D of sustainable biomass transport fuels. This would counter the hit on jobs and industry by launching their replacement, (as opposed to merely funding more conventional Gov.t spending or offsetting tax cuts for the rich).

Yet changing pump prices to fund sustainables doesn't have the scale or the clout to turn round the energy industry, and it hits the poor hardest. The only people who can do that (for those corporations that survive the coming recession) will be their shareholders.

At present, the energy corporation's shareholders are making profits from business as usual. That has to end if they are going to instruct the corporations to change course.

Therefore I suggest that rational governments will come to the point of introducing a revenue-neutral "BRED tax", being a tax on shareholder profits from those energy corporations with lesser % of their Budgets for Research, Exploration & Development of energy resources in the sustainables, with the proceeds being loaned to those firms with higher %s of their BREDs in the sustainables.

Like the rest of the myriad perspectives on peak oil, this points yet again to it not being a problem of finite resources, but rather being about the politics of just who chooses the resources on which society is to depend.

That sufficient political change could be achieved to allow a soft landing is beyond question: whether it will be seems to be partly up to the will and aspiration of US electorate.

Therefore for all our sakes, I hope to God that Americans take their chance of a fresh start !

regards,

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Postby MonteQuest » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 19:45:45

[quote="JohnDenver
How do you do that? For example, can you reduce consumption by 3% a year without causing serious problems? If so, how? Because if you can do that, it should be possible to weather peak oil without serious economic problems.[/quote]

JD,

For once you have got it right. One clarification, it is not 3% reduction, it is more like 5%. While post-peak oil is predicted to decline each year at about 1.5 -3%, we also need roughly a 3% increase in GDP to grow the economy, pay taxes, provide jobs, pay off debts. There has never been an increase in GDP without an increase in energy consumption, especially in electrical generation.

Right now, there is no way to avoid serious economic problems even without the advent of peak-oil! Remember my Perfect Storm thread?
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Postby Concerned » Mon 11 Oct 2004, 22:51:04

Who really knows, whats going to happen?

We could conserve oil or use it faster sooner or later we shall have to face the ramifications of PO.

We could have world peace and an end to poverty, but thats where theory and reality diverge.

Mabye humanity will develop new technology and thrive and perhaps there will be a large reduction in human numbers.

My opinion is hedge your bets, be optimistic plug into whats available and make allowances for a harsher scenario. I'm in the process of buying a small farm and Im teaching myself how to cultivate crops for survival including harvesting and storage, water/land management etc..

Why because I want to have my cake and eat it too. Oh and another thing IMO keep yourself as debt free as possible.
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Postby JohnDenver » Tue 12 Oct 2004, 05:41:54

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Canuck', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('JohnDenver', 'P')utting two and two together, it seems clear that Julian Darley and PCI are consciously advocating that we crash the global economy.


Yes, they are. What's your point?


My point is that crashing the global economy will cause suffering. Aren't you being a little cavalier toward the people who will suffer? The potential humanitarian problems don't bother you? All you have to say about it is: So what?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')If a global crash is inevitable, it probably is better if we do it voluntarily rather than continuing to consume as fast as we can. It is better environmentally and the more we leave in the ground now, the better for the next civilization.


Okay, let me put it to you this way: Suppose you are a single mother, or a truck driver, or one of the other millions and millions of ordinary people who are going to get it in the neck when we intentionally crash the global economy. You're going to lose your job, and your home, and everything else you have, and you're going to have to live on the street and eat at the soup kitchen (if you're lucky). Can you explain to a person like this why it is better to crash the system now, rather than wait?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')rtificially jacking up the price of oil gives us our best chance for a soft landing.


I disagree. Artificially jacking up the price to achieve the degree of conservation Darley and PCI advocate (i.e. to the point where 50, 60, 80 or 90% of usage halts) would cause the hardest possible landing. It would throw us immediately into a profound economic depression, and cause suffering and trauma on a massive scale.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat's the argument for addressing the issue proactively. We accept a lot of pain now to avoid an even worse scenario later.

What is the "worse" scenario. Is there something worse than stopping 50, 60, 80, 90% of world oil consumption and causing massive homelessness and starvation?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat argument failed in the 1960's and it will fail today for exactly the same reason. Conservation means less consumption. We aren't willing to consume less today to create a better tomorrow even though we know we could happily survive on a lot less.

We could happily survive consuming a lot less, but the economy can't survive it. If the economy can't survive neither can we.

You're talking in circles, Canuck.
You say we could happily survive on a lot less oil, and at the same time, you're saying we can't.

Which is it? If using less oil is inevitably going to crash the economy, then we in fact can't happily survive on a lot less. You can't have it both ways.

I think this is an inconsistency which the peak oilers are falling into. One minute, they say oil is absolutely critical, and any steady drop in consumption will kill us. Then the next minute, they say we could easily survive on a fraction of what we use now, and still be happy. In fact, you just said as much in your post, Canuck. It seems to me that you are contradicting yourself.
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Postby jato » Tue 12 Oct 2004, 05:55:26

Good morning JD.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')e could happily survive consuming a lot less, but the economy can't survive it. If the economy can't survive neither can we.


I read this as: Humans can make due with consuming less fossil fuels. Our economy can't. We need a new, overhauled economy. If we are lucky and make it though the coming economic crash, I we are going to see a new economy rise from the ashes (so to speak). What form that will take...I have no clue.

To sum it up: Canuck is not talking in circles.
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