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PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Economic growth with declining energy?

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Will our economy survive continuous Oil/Energy decline?

Yes
36
No votes
No
167
No votes
maybe (see comments)
35
No votes
I don't know
20
No votes
 
Total votes : 258

Re: No Oil No Economical Growth

Unread postby Anthrobus » Thu 06 Jul 2006, 07:48:43

@ Montequest and Mr. Bill,

your arguments are both very good and convincing. I am still uncertain about my projection for the po future (hovering between your positions), but one thing is quite sure imho:

Our economic structures will have to adapt soft or hard, lots of assets will loose their value (depression) but since people will not just sit by idle, there will also be a frenzy of economic activities. Maybe there will be a race or a competition for getting into the best position for the changes. A lot of investment has to be done too. Of course, a lot of out of date economic structures (car factories, suburbs) will suffer "recession". Any regrets?

Example: If a (medium sized) asteroid drops and causes a lot of destruction in your country, people loose a lot of capital due to the damage, but economic activity will pick up too due to high priority reconstruction works. And the reconstruction of neccessary structures will be a safe investment because no surplus offices will be built, but power plants, schools, factories, that bring in a high real yield to the investment. People may be poorer but will work busy and confident.

(I remember the film "big impact", after the impact and the flood wave, the president of the usa announced, that everyting would be rebuilt the same as it had been before.

Such a openly displayed poverty of mind made me wring my hands in desperation. Not a little bit better, no, just the same damned boring shit as before, what a fool of a president i thought then ...)

So, somehow the cards will just be dealt out new with po. But as long as there is something new overgrowing the rubbles of the old, using tractor or ox, you can find confidence. Maybe our kids will call us old chickenheads. And they may be right because they will look forward to a far more sustainable way of living than we do.

This reminds me to some lines of "Julius Cesar" which go roughly like this ...

The bay-trees in our country are all wither'd
And meteors fright the fixed stars of heaven;
The pale-faced moon looks bloody on the earth
And lean-look'd prophets whisper fearful change;
Rich men look sad and ruffians dance and leap,
The one in fear to lose what they enjoy,
The other to enjoy by rage and war:

ok ok, it was in richard II,

so, maybe less growth but lots of activity ...
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Re: No Oil No Economical Growth

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 06 Jul 2006, 07:56:38

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'I')n this respect we would see a return to something similar to the beginnings of the era of steam and industrialization that started to compete with the age of sail and trade on major routes through central markets. Economic activity will radiate out from these centers until the cost of transport outweighs the benefits of trade, and then you will have smaller, self-contained communities with local and regional economies. Not likely either or.


And what of the areas that have already radiated outside those centers where the cost of transport outweighs the benefits? We call those places suburbia. When it cost more to go to work than you get paid, things will come undone. I am constantly amazed to hear people posit solutions that assume smooth sailing to a new neat reality.

How are we going to re-decant suburbia back in to the cities or transform them to walkable communities?


No one said anything about smooth sailing? Or assumed a problem free transition to a new neat reality? Uneconomical, energy intensive infrastructure & lifestyles will be abandoned. That will be a wealth-destroying eventuality. But it is not unprecedented.

I am saying that when fossil fuels are gone, they're gone. Eventually we will adapt to a series of alternatives, none of which have to be as good as what we have now. That means declining standards of living.

I have left plenty of room in my analysis for resources wars, interuptions, civil strife, etc. I do NOT assume we will NOT go kicking and screaming into an era of post fossil fuels.

I think if you re-read what I have written, I am saying we will salvage what we can. Manufacturing of economic necessities near stationary sources of energy - nuclear, coal, wind, solar, geo-thermal, etc. Transport in bulk using the least energy intensive means over distance - water & rail. And where that is not possible, abandoning those areas that are no longer productive (in the energy input/output sense of the word) or reverting to local production and regional trade where possible.

We already live in such a world, to a large extent, just not in the western world.

I do not give a shit about the survival of suburbia, the American way of life and some boomer's 401K, and neither does History, except as a footnote. And I give no time horizon for this transition to take place. It simply will happen, given those resource wars do not themselves destroy us.

Who can accurately predict what events can transpire in the intervening years? Some back to a simpler agrarian past scenario? Some mad max scenario? Some mass die-off scenario? Far less likely in my opinion than a slow descent and very uneven transition into a new reality where the basics cost more in real terms, energy is scarce and expensive, losses in productivity, lower standards of living, etc.

I think the problems we face are eventually going to be more serious than designing walkable communities?

Where did I say a new neat reality? Now you're incorrectly paraphrasing my comments, MonteQuest. Trying to make me into a cornucopulator, or sumthing? ; - )

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il prices will soar to well over $100 a barrel and stay high as part of a sustained commodities bull run that has another 15 years to run, billionaire U.S. investor Jim Rogers told Reuters in an interview.

One factor that could bring down the price would be a bird flu epidemic, which would send all asset classes plummeting, he said, although oil would probably fall less than other markets.

"We're going to have high oil prices for a very long time. The surprise is going to be how high it goes," Rogers said.


Reiterating earlier comment oil prices would hit at least $100 a barrel, he said: "It will be much more than $100 before the bull market is over."
Oil will hit well over $100 and stay high: Rogers

As I said much earlier in the thread. It will be scarcity not price that will determine growth or no growth. I was gratified to stumble across this article today, which supports my view. I do not want to be popular, but I was getting lonely.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')nergy and Development in Time of Rising Oil Prices

It is well known that economic development needs large quantities of energy of all kinds: oil, gas, electricity, coal. Due to global markets and energy trading, there are today smaller differences in prices between these fuels. This restricts choice to technical criteria and factors, including type and kind of equipment and machinery that is selected, purchased, installed and operated. Increasingly, also, there is demand for multi-fuel or flexible equipment and machinery that is able to run on more than one primary energy source or fuel source, with minimum ‘down time’ and minimum cost for switchover.

Anywhere in the world, and in any historical period, economic growth of countries depended on those countries using more energy. If we study the history of fast economic growth in Asian Tiger economies, and focus their period of fastest growth and development, that was approximately 1975-1990, we find that Asian Tiger economies experienced very fast growth of oil demand at exactly the time of most-recent fastest increase of oil prices, that is in 1973-1974, and again at time of highest real price of oil, that is 1979-1981.
Oil Prices and the World Economy
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Re: No Oil No Economical Growth

Unread postby Concerned » Sat 29 Jul 2006, 16:45:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Anywhere in the world, and in any historical period, economic growth of countries depended on those countries using more energy. If we study the history of fast economic growth in Asian Tiger economies, and focus their period of fastest growth and development, that was approximately 1975-1990, we find that Asian Tiger economies experienced very fast growth of oil demand at exactly the time of most-recent fastest increase of oil prices, that is in 1973-1974, and again at time of highest real price of oil, that is 1979-1981.
Oil Prices and the World Economy[/quote]

The full article is a good take on the oil and other commodity issue.

If the oil crisis was 1973-1974 and the tigers started to take off in 1975 then the first oil crisis was behind them.

It would be interesting to get a breakdown of energy prices (coal/oil/gas) and compare it year by year to economic growth.

Also interesting would be to see where the growth in the tigers was coming from? How much industry moved from say US or Europe to Asia based on labor cost savings? (Maintain profits in the face of higher energy costs.)
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Re: No Oil No Economical Growth

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 31 Jul 2006, 03:05:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Concerned', '
')The full article is a good take on the oil and other commodity issue.

If the oil crisis was 1973-1974 and the tigers started to take off in 1975 then the first oil crisis was behind them.

It would be interesting to get a breakdown of energy prices (coal/oil/gas) and compare it year by year to economic growth.

Also interesting would be to see where the growth in the tigers was coming from? How much industry moved from say US or Europe to Asia based on labor cost savings? (Maintain profits in the face of higher energy costs.)


I think it is prudent to keep in mind the sequence of events. First, Japan and then afterwards the other so-called Asian Tigers started to produce low-cost, low value added goods; then they started to export; then they started to assemble goods for foreign investors who exported as well; and then foreign investment poured in; and stimulated both domestic production and more assembly for re-export factories; then domestic companies expanded into value-added manufacturing and moved-up the value chain; and finally some of those countries, having outstripped their domestic resources (land, labor, capital) started to themselves invest in assembly and low-cost, low-value added manufacturing in other Asian countries like Japan did in S. Korea, HK in China, Taiwan in China, Asian firms in Vietnam, etc.

I do not think it would be a fair characterization to say that growth in these Asian Tigers was caused by offshoring production from USA or Europe. I think manufacturers only came to these newly developed economies after they had already proven they were low cost manufacturers and assemblers for re-export.

Sorry, I do not have a time-line or a breakdown of commodity and energy prices to superimpose on that development, but just keep in mind that Honda, for example, got its start in manufacturing for export to the USA in small motor cycles that were not even seen as a competitive threat by British or American motorcycle makers at the time, but they used that platform to launch a very successful global brand and expand into automobiles in 1973 as well as fixed power sources such as generators, lawnmowers, outboard engines, etc. and are now more profitable than their American counterparts and their British competitors have practically ceased to exist.

It would be fair to say, that today in the face of higher energy prices that offshoring to established manufacturing hubs where labor costs are lower may help offset those higher energy prices if the labor savings or productivity are greater than the cost of shipping. Then you could argue whether that is sustainable in the face of PO induced energy scarcity.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Revi » Mon 31 Jul 2006, 10:09:04

I think there may be economic activity in the big change that must take place. People will be buying new houses closer to their work, switching to smaller cars or motorcycles and retofitting their houses to capture solar energy if they are smart. This all costs money, and people will spend to rearrange their lives. It may come out of savings, or they may be trading down, but they are trading. It's an ill wind that blows no man good. There won't be many economic winners when peak oil really starts biting, but there will be a few.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MonteQuest » Mon 31 Jul 2006, 19:27:45

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'I') think there may be economic activity in the big change that must take place. People will be buying new houses closer to their work, switching to smaller cars or motorcycles and retofitting their houses to capture solar energy if they are smart. This all costs money.....


MonteQuest wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd takes energy. Energy that will be in short supply or perhaps not available.

Where will the energy come from to have things to buy?


You mean transport fuel, not energy, correct?
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Ireland

Unread postby bulldozer » Fri 03 Nov 2006, 08:11:25

It is interesting.

It is obvious we cannot rely on having more energy, or as much energy, in the future.

Should we make preparations now? No. George Bush says significantly altering our consuming habits would hurt the economy.

But Wait!

Ireland uses much less energy per/person than us! They use 2/3rds the oil per person as us! We use 2.13 times as much electricity per person as Ireland!

But...Their unemployment is very low! Their GDP is growing much faster than ours! Their GDP per Capita is about 42,000 dollars(american), just like Ours!

There must be room to change our consuming habits and improve our economy at the same time. Their must be room to reduce our consumption of oil, gas, and electricity, and improve our quality of life at the same time.

Sure, Ireland is more comparable to Maine than to the Entire United States.

here is something else I noticed about Ireland! Trade with Japan, China, and third world nations was an insignificant fraction of their total imports and exports!

The evidence is mounting! Turbo Capitalism Globalism is incompatible with sound energy policies.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Revi » Fri 03 Nov 2006, 11:51:54

I agree, Maine is like Ireland. We can make the switch to low energy/green and growing economy with smart leadership. Let's hope we don't get Chandler Woodcock for Governor. He's a nice guy, but he won't take Maine in the right direction. If he gets in we'll go down with the ship (the Repubs in Washington). I say, go green and reap the rewards. We need to figure a way to use our "brand". When you think of Maine you think of a green place. Why not encourage green industries to move here and benefit from our brand as well. Make Maine the Ireland of the 21st century. That could lead to economic growth with declining energy.
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Re: Ireland

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 20 Nov 2006, 06:33:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bulldozer', 'I')t is interesting.

It is obvious we cannot rely on having more energy, or as much energy, in the future.

Should we make preparations now? No. George Bush says significantly altering our consuming habits would hurt the economy.

But Wait!

Ireland uses much less energy per/person than us! They use 2/3rds the oil per person as us! We use 2.13 times as much electricity per person as Ireland!

But...Their unemployment is very low! Their GDP is growing much faster than ours! Their GDP per Capita is about 42,000 dollars(american), just like Ours!

There must be room to change our consuming habits and improve our economy at the same time. Their must be room to reduce our consumption of oil, gas, and electricity, and improve our quality of life at the same time.

Sure, Ireland is more comparable to Maine than to the Entire United States.

here is something else I noticed about Ireland! Trade with Japan, China, and third world nations was an insignificant fraction of their total imports and exports!

The evidence is mounting! Turbo Capitalism Globalism is incompatible with sound energy policies.


I would be very careful about using Ireland as an example and then applying any generalizations from that example to other countries.

First of all, Ireland was transformed based on Turbo Capitalism and Globalism and is not an alternative economic model. Ireland used to be a net exporter of its own people due to a lack of economic alternatives at home.

What changed is special economic aid from the EU via net payers to the EU budget such as Germany, the UK and Holland. That means jobs in Ireland at the expense of jobs in those countries. Nice trick if you can pull it off.

Secondly, Ireland has benefited from Special Tax Zones such as Dublin for the purpose of issuing Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) such as eurobonds and other financial instruments on par with BVI, Luxembourg and other tax regimes that allow low to no taxation on financial transactions. However, this game only works so long as one country or zone enjoys a lighter tax treatment than another. In other words tax competition between countries. Net, net it is a zero sum game, so it cannot be applied universally.

Thirdly, Ireland has benefited from globalization and global capitalism in that many American companies have chosen to locate their call centres and manufacturing in Ireland due to an English speaking population, part of the eurzone, in the EU and ironically Ireland USED TO BE cheap, but no longer. Still, light tax treatment means that some companies still choose Ireland as their European base of operations. I know two companies personally that have relocated head office to Ireland after considering the alternatives, but again, I repeat this is tax competition and therefore cannot be applied universally.

And lastly, little countries, smaller problems. Larger countries, bigger problems. It is easier to implement policies in a niche economy based on a few comparative advantages, but if every country followed Ireland's lead, the advantage would be quickly eroded and therefore the excess growth arbitraged away.

Do not get me wrong. In many ways Ireland made the right decisions for Ireland at the time. The results are impressive. But they were made due to globalization and are capitalistic as well as opportunistic choices to take advantage of a global market place for capital as well as English language skills. As the EU works to close special tax zones and as Ireland becomes more expensive to employ labor those advantages will flow to other less developed countries even as more expensive countries also re-examine their own labor laws and tax codes.

And as far as energy use goes, Ireland is much smaller in geographical area than the USA, so naturally they use less transport fuel as well as small and dense are more conducive to public transport. That Ireland has also chosen knowlege industries and to be a service based economy versus a heavy manufacturing hub also means less energy use.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby kokoda » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 09:59:48

Capitalists want you to buy ... and continue to buy until it hurts. They want you to buy the biggest and most expensive cars available ... in fact more then one ... they want you to buy several new cars. Not just cars but every consumer good under the sun.

They want you to spend money you haven't got on stuff you don't need.

In the ideal capitalist society industry grows by producing more and more. Making stuff is useless unless people also buy more and more. Since consumers are unlikely to have the money to sustain this spending frenzy they must borrow against their future earnings. Consumers then find themselves in debt to the banks and totally dependant on the continual growth of the economy to earn the money to pay off their current borrowings.

You throw peak oil into that mix and the whole thing comes crashing down like a house of cards.

Oil prices go up and so does everything else. People stop buying because they are uncomfortable with their level of debt. Factories slow down or close as a result. People lose jobs, loans are defaulted on, no more money is avaiable for growth and then you have a depression.

Peak oil won't destroy capitalism. Eventually after the economy freefalls long enough, and the population sustainability level is met, capitalism will crank up again, albiet at a much lower level.

This is the cyclic nature of capitalism. Every now and then when the market overheats or something goes wrong then the economy will go bad and then recover when sustainability is reached.

After peak oil we may never see the sort of rapid growth rates we are seeing today. People will be more concerned with the basics of keeping their families fed and giving them a roof over their heads.

Owning 42 inch plasma televisions and SUVs will be a somewhat lower priority.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Doly » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 10:16:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '
')Peak oil won't destroy capitalism. Eventually after the economy freefalls long enough, and the population sustainability level is met, capitalism will crank up again, albiet at a much lower level.


You don't believe in people's ability to learn, do you?
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby kokoda » Thu 30 Nov 2006, 12:39:41

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '
')Peak oil won't destroy capitalism. Eventually after the economy freefalls long enough, and the population sustainability level is met, capitalism will crank up again, albiet at a much lower level.


You don't believe in people's ability to learn, do you?

Lets just say that the jury is out.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 03:35:35

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '
')Peak oil won't destroy capitalism. Eventually after the economy freefalls long enough, and the population sustainability level is met, capitalism will crank up again, albiet at a much lower level.


You don't believe in people's ability to learn, do you?

Lets just say that the jury is out.


Wow, capitalism is such an easy scapegoat for everything. Why do not we invent communal ownership over the means of production to solve all our problems? Oh, we already did, it is called communism.

I did not realize that resources allocated for free by dictat, or at a nominal price below their cost of production, was an efficient means of limiting demand to deal with the geological reality of peak oil depletion? My dumb.

Let's see? From the hundreds of thousands of jobs performed everyday in every city in every country by the free market a central plannner can probably think of one hundred - maximum.

No thanks. Central planning is the worst solution to a problem like peak oil. I trust 1000+ firms working on a solution versus a government finding the solution to post peak oil depletion.

If there is a solution? If not, central planning will just make a bad situation worse!

Funny, shortages and surpluses have always occured during recorded history. Why give capitalism the bad rap? Lack of imagination?
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby kokoda » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 08:22:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Doly', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', '
')Peak oil won't destroy capitalism. Eventually after the economy freefalls long enough, and the population sustainability level is met, capitalism will crank up again, albiet at a much lower level.


You don't believe in people's ability to learn, do you?

Lets just say that the jury is out.


Wow, capitalism is such an easy scapegoat for everything. Why do not we invent communal ownership over the means of production to solve all our problems? Oh, we already did, it is called communism.

I did not realize that resources allocated for free by dictat, or at a nominal price below their cost of production, was an efficient means of limiting demand to deal with the geological reality of peak oil depletion? My dumb.

Let's see? From the hundreds of thousands of jobs performed everyday in every city in every country by the free market a central plannner can probably think of one hundred - maximum.

No thanks. Central planning is the worst solution to a problem like peak oil. I trust 1000+ firms working on a solution versus a government finding the solution to post peak oil depletion.

If there is a solution? If not, central planning will just make a bad situation worse!

Funny, shortages and surpluses have always occured during recorded history. Why give capitalism the bad rap? Lack of imagination?

Why do so many people see issues in such black and white terms.

You are either a communist or a capitalist ... no inbetween.

Yes ... you are right there are a number of firms working towards finding solutions to oil depletion ... but wouldn't it be so much easier if the government of the day actually helped with this endeavour? What would be wrong with a government actually having a plan and also having the gumption to follow it through?

Are you suggesting the Arnold Schwarzenegger is a commie because he is willing to impliment green policies?

Capitalism is by enlarge, about making money, not saving the world. I am not saying that there aren't some industries that aren't genuinely interested in more environmentally friendly and socially responsible products ... but I should imagine that it would be difficult for these companies to compete against truly hard nosed businessmen who are only interested in the bottom line.

Governments need to legislate to bring these industries into line. They need to be forced to reduce carbon emissions and energy consumption. On the otherhand they need to be encouraged to develop new fuels, and technologies that could end up saving the planet.

If you read what I have written you will notice that I said capitalism will survive. Capitalism is the natural economic order of things. But like most things it needs to be regulated and controlled.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 09:07:20

Kokoda wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')hy do so many people see issues in such black and white terms.


Sorry when you frame your argument as follows:

"Capitalists want you to buy ... and continue to buy until it hurts. They want you to buy the biggest and most expensive cars available ... in fact more then one ... they want you to buy several new cars. Not just cars but every consumer good under the sun.

They want you to spend money you haven't got on stuff you don't need. "


You are not seeking the middle ground. You are making a definite statement.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')ou are either a communist or a capitalist ... no in between.


I am neither per se, but let us say that I have lived, worked and studied in enough communist and former communist countries to realize that centrally planned economies are, in sum total, bad.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')es ... you are right there are a number of firms working towards finding solutions to oil depletion ... but wouldn't it be so much easier if the government of the day actually helped with this endeavour? What would be wrong with a government actually having a plan and also having the gumption to follow it through?


I assume you're talking about 'democratic governments' here, so in answer, they give their electorate whatever they ask for whether that is an integrated public transport system or a far-flung suburbia. I have not noticed any dearth of tax incentives for 'alternative energies'? Quite the opposite from corn based ethanol to wind power. Do taxpayers ever finish paying for nuclear energy and its subsequent clean-up? I do not think so?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')re you suggesting the Arnold Schwarzenegger is a commie because he is willing to impliment green policies?


Yes, when I lived in Manhattan Beach and commuted everyday into downtown LA I noticed all California's green policies from oil pumpers in La Brea to the bumper to bumper traffic on the freeway. Oh, I also noticed their racial harmony during the Rodney King riots as well. Where else in the world can you get dangerous levels of smog, droughts, floods, earthquakes, riots and such brotherly love all in one place? Plus cheap crack? A truly magical kingdom. But of course I am sure it is much different today with the Governator in charge?

He is a movie actor married to a Kennedy. Star appeal, not accumen got him his job. But, in his defense, he is using market mechanisms to implement his green policies. However, more worrying to me is voter initiatives that actually stop governments from implementing cohesive policies across state borders and national boundaries.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')apitalism is by enlarge, about making money, not saving the world. I am not saying that there aren't some industries that aren't genuinely interested in more environmentally friendly and socially responsible products ... but I should imagine that it would be difficult for these companies to compete against truly hard nosed businessmen who are only interested in the bottom line.

Saving the world is the job of the people, not business. Not one product gets bought or sold unless there are willing buyers parting with their hard earned wages. Everyone who drives or buys groceries or heats their home contributes to global warming, environmental degradation and peak oil depletion.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')overnments need to legislate to bring these industries into line. They need to be forced to reduce carbon emissions and energy consumption. On the otherhand they need to be encouraged to develop new fuels, and technologies that could end up saving the planet.

Voters need to elect governments interested in saving the planet.

Sometimes Mr.Mogambo Guru (MMG) says it best.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ') Next, I deftly edit the caption to read "You will soon be stuck with everybody's check, you stupid socialist moron! Or did you think that continually expanding the size and cost of government to support more and more people was possible over the long term, you ignorant Leftist yahoo?" Hahahaha! Now, I finish up by erasing Mr. Weyant's name, writing in my own, and then - voila! - all done! Suitable for framing, or nominating for a Pulitzer Prize, either way it's the perfect gift for the upcoming holidays! Order now!
123...You want me to drink oil?

Or give that Mogambo guy (TMG) his due. How about this one?
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'W')ell, despite their admitted dismal failure, Messrs. Altman and Blinder now have their own plan to set things aright! They go on to say that more socialism, communism and fascism will fix things, and that involves raising the federal minimum wage, increasing the Earned Income Tax Credit (a negative income tax, as the low-wage worker gets a tax refund in excess of all the taxes he paid!), "moving toward" universal health insurance (with all children immediately covered), moderating government spending and raising taxes, having someone pay for more education and training for America's workers so that they can, somehow, compete with foreign workers and yet make more money than they do, again getting the federal budget under control (which, they repeat, involves less spending and higher taxes), forced conservation measures to limit energy usage, and more research (paid for, I assume, by the federal government spending the money, either in grants or tax incentives) for developing energy alternatives. Hahahaha!
123... have you got your $87?

Yep, nothing like government spending to fix the ails of the market. Like issuing too many CO2 permits causing prices to fall to less than half what is needed to implement technology to curb emissions, and handing instead windfall profits to utilities instead of them delivering wind driven energy.


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')f you read what I have written you will notice that I said capitalism will survive. Capitalism is the natural economic order of things. But like most things it needs to be regulated and controlled.

Exactly. In the absense of capitalism we invent it because it serves our needs well. Where it is not allowed to function properly we have blackmarkets and corruption to provide goods and services that people want, need and are prepared to pay for. That is why saving the world, or what is left of it to be saved, will be by markets and not governments.

Regulation and control by governments are fine. So long as they are themselves controlled by an educated electorate, are not tainted by corruption and so long as the tyranny of the majority does not trample innovation, but instead encourages it.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby kokoda » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 12:04:37

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Sorry when you frame your argument as follows:

"Capitalists want you to buy ... and continue to buy until it hurts. They want you to buy the biggest and most expensive cars available ... in fact more then one ... they want you to buy several new cars. Not just cars but every consumer good under the sun.

They want you to spend money you haven't got on stuff you don't need. "


You are not seeking the middle ground. You are making a definite statement.


Nah ... I am happy with that statement.

Even the the most environmentally aware, mung bean eating, tree hugging, business person wants you to buy their product. Not only that but I can't imagine them turning down your business even if they were aware that you were buying a lot more then you actually needed.

Capitalists want you to buy.

My point is more that governments of any political persuasion should not allow capitalism to dictate the terms. Capitalism is self serving. Capitalism is also self destructive. Even companies with a social conscience are forced to be ruthless if they want to survive in the market place.

I am amazed when people say capitalism will save us ... how can a runaway train save anyone?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Yes, when I lived in Manhattan Beach and commuted everyday into downtown LA I noticed all California's green policies from oil pumpers in La Brea to the bumper to bumper traffic on the freeway. Oh, I also noticed their racial harmony during the Rodney King riots as well. Where else in the world can you get dangerous levels of smog, droughts, floods, earthquakes, riots and such brotherly love all in one place? Plus cheap crack? A truly magical kingdom. But of course I am sure it is much different today with the Governator in charge?

He is a movie actor married to a Kennedy. Star appeal, not accumen got him his job. But, in his defense, he is using market mechanisms to implement his green policies. However, more worrying to me is voter initiatives that actually stop governments from implementing cohesive policies across state borders and national boundaries.


He can't act either.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '
')Saving the world is the job of the people, not business. Not one product gets bought or sold unless there are willing buyers parting with their hard earned wages. Everyone who drives or buys groceries or heats their home contributes to global warming, environmental degradation and peak oil depletion


But people don't want the responsibility of saving the world ... thats why we elect governments.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby Revi » Fri 01 Dec 2006, 14:23:05

I don't know about the society in general, but an individual person can get ahead by saving money and not buying as much fossil fuel. Fossil fuel is a waste. You pay and it gets burned up. It isn't like a capital improvement that keeps paying and paying. They just eat your money. We save over $2550 a year from the changes we've made in our household. We use half the fossil fuel we used 5 years ago. Click on the pics for more info:

http://www.msad54.org/sahs/appliedarts/ ... /index.htm
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby MrBill » Mon 04 Dec 2006, 03:41:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Revi', 'I') don't know about the society in general, but an individual person can get ahead by saving money and not buying as much fossil fuel. Fossil fuel is a waste. You pay and it gets burned up. It isn't like a capital improvement that keeps paying and paying. They just eat your money. We save over $2550 a year from the changes we've made in our household. We use half the fossil fuel we used 5 years ago. Click on the pics for more info:

http://www.msad54.org/sahs/appliedarts/ ... /index.htm


Absolutely, Revi, burning petrol in your gas tank or fuel oil to heat your home is an expense plain and simple. It always is a sunk cost. Even if prices are low it pays to use less and save to invest the difference.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby JustWatch » Tue 13 Mar 2007, 21:44:26

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', 'C')apitalism is self serving. Capitalism is also self destructive.

Capitalism isn’t self-destructive, the people are self-destructive! It’s the runaway population that’s the real problem, not how we do business! That business is what puts food on our plates!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kokoda', 'B')ut people don't want the responsibility of saving the world ... thats why we elect governments.
Yes ... you are right there are a number of firms working towards finding solutions to oil depletion ... but wouldn't it be so much easier if the government of the day actually helped with this endeavour? What would be wrong with a government actually having a plan and also having the gumption to follow it through?


It would be helpful if the government lent support to this endeavor, but the problem is not that issue, it’s the problem of the government usually tending to meddle too far and screw it all up much more than the opposite. All good intentions aside, many of their actions cause more grief than they prevent. If we had competent leaders, we’d be OK, but we don’t. The answer to why we don’t can be found in my signature below. Communism isn’t the answer either, since there’s still a fallible and way too often greedy and self-serving leader at the top of the chain that rules by nothing more than force of arms and fear. In a democracy such as here in the US, the voters, otherwise known as “we the people” are the real culprit, since they put the leaders into place. This doesn’t surprise me one bit, since the average voter is too self-interested to care enough to make informed decisions concerning the votes they place. They are too busy trying to either get rich at someone else’s expense, or not work at all at everyone’s expense. It can’t go on forever of course, and we’ll have to take what comes. So it boils down to the people being the real problem, too many, too uncaring, and too damned dumb. But we can be aware ourselves, and make our votes count at the very least. It has to start somewhere, and that’s the only reason I’m even here at PO.com. If I didn’t care like so many of the rest, I’d be drinking beer and trying to get laid right now, rather than doing all this keyboard banging. Cheers, and meaning you just gotta laugh about it all, or you’ll go nuts!

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'R')egulation and control by governments are fine. So long as they are themselves controlled by an educated electorate, are not tainted by corruption and so long as the tyranny of the majority does not trample innovation, but instead encourages it.

He said it, I said it, now if we can only get the majority to say it. It takes each individual step to walk around the world, one step at a time.
They understand the fact that true democracy is nothing but a fallacy whereby idiots are elected into power and these idiots then have to cater to the morons that elected them in the first place.
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Re: Economic growth with declining energy?

Unread postby mididoctors » Mon 07 May 2007, 12:44:29

How about if consumerism was sublimated into a virtual realm.. identity expressed through consumption and material ownership could be replaced by a low energy virtual consumer society where ones bling is virtual...

ok that is extremely thin

if one wanted to create economic growth through people buying things and services that do not consume INCREASINGLY DISPROPORTIONATE amounts of energy perhaps virtual shopping is a possibility?

people want to complement their sense of identity through ownership... thats how all that consumerism works is it not?

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