by MrBill » Tue 13 Feb 2007, 05:40:03
I am not sure I would use the term free market. Markets are rarely free of government and other trade distorting interference. I would use the term market economy as opposed to a centrally planned economy. And which one is superior in terms of mitigating the economic effects of post peak oil hydrocarbon depletion because peak oil itself is a geological fact and not an economic problem that can be solved by anyone.
Countries are not poor because they have market economies. Generally they are poor because the market economy is not functioning properly. Wars, droughts, famines, overpopulation, bureaucracy, incompetence and corruption are the main reason why countries are poor. Usually the more centrally planned the economy the poorer the country. A lesson learned by China. Their economy only started to grow when the communists released the energy of 1.3 billion people by opening up to a market economy and started making stuff that they could sell. Stuff someone was willing to buy.
If Africans are starving it is not due to market economics. The Lost Continent has many natural resources, which is why China is there right now trying to do trade deals to gain access to them. But when corrupt Nigerian politicians have stolen more money from their oil & gas sales than the entire Marshall Plan used to rebuild Europe after WWII there is a reason why Nigeria is as poor as it is and not another Norway. That is a failure of governance. Not the market. The market is paying Nigeria for their oil & gas. It is up to them to re-invest that money into infrastructure to help their economy grow for the benefit of their own people.
The hundreds of billions of dollars of aid and soft-loans that have been given to Africa and other developing countries should have been more than enough for these countries to reform their economies. Certainly, many Asian countries, by comparison, have improved their citizens' lifestyles through market economies and trade during the same period of time.
But if you were to address The African Union of countries or ASEAN group of leaders and suggest in your arrogance that you know better than them how to run their economies they would rightly deride you as a condescending, imperial, neo-colonialist. The fact is that these are sovereign countries and they can do what they like. They are free to make mistakes. And then their people suffer. However, not because of an efficient market economy, but due to its absence.
A well-functioning market economy has millions upon millions of variables that no central planner can even begin to fully comprehend. That is the main reason why any interference on their behalf usually ends in disaster. That is why there will be no Manhattan Project to deal with peak oil. There is no solution to peak oil. There are only a million reactions and counter reactions to the problem of peak oil to mitigate its economic effects. Any government interference in that process will have unforeseen consequences.
If oil & gas gets allocated to the military-defense complex instead of being used to build public infrastructure that is not a failing of the market economy. That is once again a failure of government. And if you live in a nominally democratic country, or even a two party state like the USA, then by default a failure of the voters to exercise their democratic rights responsibly. To blame voter apathy and ignorance on the market is just wrong. It is intellectually lazy. Its proponents are academically dishonest.
If the market economy has its failings, such as producing gas-guzzling SUVs, then this just reflects back on poor consumer choices and bad government. Market solutions to curbing SUV buying include raising the cost of gasoline through carbon taxes; road charges that tax usage; subsidizing public transport; not subsidizing road construction; taxing engine size; and other measures to change consumer attitudes. Every one of those measures is being done now, as we speak, in other western market economies with mixed levels of success.
The fact is that even in Western Europe with its enviable levels of public transport that petroleum is still too cheap to get all consumers out of their cars and into trains, trams, buses and the metro. So even with gasoline at least twice as expensive as in the United States consumers are making poor decisions. And because consumers are voters as well their governments are not making the right choices either.
Only physical scarcity will end people’s reliance on hydrocarbons. Not a Manhattan Project. Not a Marshall Plan to build alternative energy infrastructure projects. Not a centrally planned government response. And not wealth transfers from the haves to the have-nots. Peak oil has no solution. We can only let the market get on with mitigating its economic fall-out. And that is why Bas’ question is so important and why many responses against him are so wrong.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.