by Sixstrings » Fri 18 Feb 2011, 12:12:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Queaks', 'B')e gentle, I am a peakoil posting virgin...
What I get from your post is that you're saying you have a nice "nest egg," you're in the "professional class," and $10 per gallon gas wouldn't cramp your style one bit since you're doing so well. And so peak oil is nothing for you to worry about.
That may all be true.. but you're still a member of a larger society, and what happens to them affects you. For example, you might get carjacked while filling up that Range Rover with $10 per gallon gas.
As for what happens in the next twenty years.. none of us knows for sure. But history shows that apparently stable systems can suddenly fall apart with remarkable speed.. look at the collapse of the USSR, look at what's happening right now in the Middle East.
If I had to make a prediction for the next 20 years, I would say that oil shortages will continue to knock the global economy down one peg at a time. So depression / recession, then weak recovery with a bit of growth that just pushes the oil envelope again and then the economy resets at a lower level. As for the US it may never get to "doom" in 20 years but doom is how you define it. Some would call Mexico "doom," some wouldn't -- I think we'll look more like Mexico in 20 years.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n a gradual decline the market would be orderly, and the open markets handle that better than the government 6 days out of 7.
I actually agree with that, free open market is better than rationing. But.. look at WWII. If shortage is severe enough, we'll have rationing with little coupon books and all (although that rationing was more about military production priority).
As for orderly markets.. do you read Zerohedge? The markets are propped up by the government / Fed. And then you have all the high frequency trading algorithms.. I'm not so sure about a perpetually orderly market.
Lastly, if you want to understand peak oil then here's a fantastic documentary Ludi posted a while back: