by Carlhole » Fri 22 Apr 2011, 01:25:16
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Carlhole', '[')url=http://www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net/print/Epochal%20Tectonic%20Shift.pdf]F. William Engdahl, Oil Geopolitics[/url]
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '[')b]“We are in the Midst of an Epochal Tectonic Shift”
Given the fact, that the oil price attracts strong attention these days, it is more than just fitting to have a detailed conversation with one of the most prominent observers of the “black gold” business: F. William Engdahl. In the following exclusive interview, he discussed his views on the current oil price, the history of the oil interests in the 20th Century, the true aims of the "War on Terror," and last but not least Peak Oil. - By Lars Schall
Mr. Engdahl, is the oil price by and large driven by massive speculation?
Whether you disagree or agree with Mr. Engdahl, you have to admit that some very complex geopolitics accompanies any analysis of the oil market.
Seems clear to me that the world is being sewn up into a single economic unit - a predictable occurrence given the record of standardization all through the industrial revolution. The control of petroleum resources would be a necessary battle on that road to unification. Such a thing is inevitable anyway given the huge population pressures, instantaneous global communications, and the increasingly rapid advances in all the Sciences.
I could probably find some chart/graphs that show actual global increases in automation. This is something that is easily quantifiable. ...and it's a steep growth curve. It's not showing any negative effects from the constraint of natural resources like oil. Generally, if the price of oil stays high, this is a strong pressure for businesses to adopt even more automation. There's no sign of a slowing of this trend; in the IT world, the trend upwards is exponential, with a steep upwards trends in robotics too.
I'm reading a book right now called,
The Lights In The Tunnel: Automation, Accelerating Technology and the Economy of the Future$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '5').0 out of 5 stars AUTOMATION CHANGES EVERYTHING, December 2, 2009
By W. Sheridan "Epistemological Entrepreneur" (Ottawa, Canada)
When manufacturing automation produced the Great Depression there were forecasts that the Price System was doomed because the income from jobs was what provided purchasing power for the mass market. But instead of collapse, a transition was begun whereby the labour market was shifted from manufacturing employment to service employment.
But in The Industrialization of Intelligence, Noah Kennedy warned us that the same processes that had eliminated jobs in manufacturing would eventually be applied to intellectual work. Martin Ford is now announcing that we are very close to massive layoffs amongst Knowledge Workers because everything from inventory re-stocking, to legal research, to medical diagnostics, will be progressively automated as well.
No jobs means no pay cheques, so a decline of 30% in the size of the workforce will bring ruin to both ordinary consumers and mass marketing. Declining sales means declining profits, and that leads to declining investments and declining innovation. The market will not be able to shift sufficient employment to any other sector to recreate jobs. Market-financed automation will undermine the incomes of virtually everyone.
It's time to rethink the way income is distributed as well as the lifestyles that consumers lead. If economic productivity is taxed at the same rate as previous labour costs, transfer payments can then be established to provide income to otherwise unemployed consumers. These transfers should be enough to cover the basics: food, clothing, shelter, medical treatment, transportation, education, and entertainment. There is literally no other way to get purchasing power into the hands of consumers.
To keep people motivated to continue "behaving themselves," the transfer rates could be tied to incentives for responsible and creative lifestyles. More education would result in a somewhat higher transfer payment, as would volunteer work, and other helpful and creative endeavours. These are some of Mr. Ford's suggestions, and they are all very carefully thought out and presented. Since we will all be impacted by the continuing process of automation, we all need to read this book, and engage in conversation regarding how and when such steps need to be taken.