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Impact of PO on family life

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Impact of PO on family life

Unread postby Rickenbacker » Wed 01 Jun 2005, 18:04:14

Im looking for the most informed opinion on the economic impact of peak oil, mainly on a family level, though obviously a thourough analysis will involve macroeconomics. Questions I'm looking for answers to include:

1) What will be the effect on goods in shops - will they just stop being delivered or will they become more expensive. If so which goods?

2) Pensions, loans, mortgages, other 'on paper' investments. What happens to them if there is an economic depression? Do the loans get defaulted or do the banks become heavies?

3) Do we think the current economic system will work or will we need to revert to local trade, different currencies, rationing?

4) Jobs, careers - which sectors will be hit first, and which ones will be worst affected?

5) Where will government resources be placed? Which sectors will lose out?

Answers to any would be appreciated, or links to other forum discussions, but I'd particularly like some expert opinions if anyones got any good links/reading suggestions.
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Unread postby RonMN » Wed 01 Jun 2005, 21:17:04

WOW you ask some great questions!!!

The truth is...if any of us had the answer (the future telling crystal ball) we WOULD tell you! but we're as stumped to the futuee as you.


QUOTE: 4)

Jobs, careers - which sectors will be hit first, and which ones will be worst affected?

This has been pondered much in "The Canary in the Coal Mine" thread...

You might go read that & see if your questions are answered.

and...Good luck!
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Unread postby strider3700 » Wed 01 Jun 2005, 22:14:37

Well since I spend too much time thinking here are my thoughts. I can of course be wrong as I'm really just guessing.

1) What will be the effect on goods in shops - will they just stop being delivered or will they become more expensive. If so which goods?

I think both will happen Anything that isn't coming from next door right now will get more expensive. Some things just won't be available.

Anything that doesn't need to be preserved (coffee, tea...) will still be available it may just take much longer to get, will be rarer and will cost a lot more. Anything that has to be rushed somewhere before it spoils will not be available or will be ultra expensive. I expect to never eat another banana shortly after it hits.

True luxury things will be less available. Can you imagine paying to ship cotton from egypt for sheets when it's available in the southern US?


2) Pensions, loans, mortgages, other 'on paper' investments. What happens to them if there is an economic depression? Do the loans get defaulted or do the banks become heavies?

Pensions are already questionable in some industries namely the airlines. I have zero faith that I will ever see a penny of mine. Loans are almost always made on collateral of some sort or for something of value, I bet if you can't pay they come to get it at least at first, after 90% have defaulted I don't know if they will bother trying to collect or if it will all just vanish. Mortgages have value because of the land they are on. This is the one that concerns me. The possibilities are basically They forget the debt when everyone defaults or they take the land back. If they take the land they may possibly make you work to stay on it while they own it, and we're back to being serfs. Thats pretty doomer but is a possibility. Other paper investments are likely to be worthless in my mind.

3) Do we think the current economic system will work or will we need to revert to local trade, different currencies, rationing?

The current economic system is propped up in lots of places as is, I have no faith it will survive. Local trade will be necessary even if the current system survives, it just won't be worthwhile to ship items 1000's of miles. paying someone $2/ to make a $40 item instead of paying someone $15/hour to make the same item makes no sense if it costs $30 to ship the item from the $2 guy to the customer but only $10 to ship from the $15 guy to the customer. Free trade and exporting the manufacturing sector will bite us on the ass.

Long term I see different currencies in large countries like canada and the US simply because they are too spread to stay stable without easy transport. In the short term (my lifetime) I expect to see them stay together and use the same currencies as they currently do.

Rationing- almost guaranteed in some places, but there will be a glut in others. Eventually things will balance.

4) Jobs, careers - which sectors will be hit first, and which ones will be worst affected?

I strongly believe that transport and anything involved in transport will be the first hit. Airlines, truckers get beat up by the costs, then they pass it on to the suppliers and they get beat up. IN the end I figure only farmer and soldier are safe jobs. Everything else is pretty much a luxury. I make software that does the equivalent of push paper for an industry that relies on big trucks full of trees hauling logs 100's if not 1000's of miles to be cut and then halued somewhere else to build with, I won't be reaching retirement age doing that ;)


5) Where will government resources be placed? Which sectors will lose out?
Where will they be placed and where should they be placed I believe are different things.
I expect subsidies to keep trucks and planes running, the money should be building more trains and railway lines. I expect oil and coal to complain that it's too expensive to hunt for more so subsidize us. At this point Nuclear should be building full tilt just to keep up with demand. I think it's too late to make renewables usefull in all but specialized areas. Eventually they will be the majority, but we'll be doing far less then.

Sectors that lose out. Education would be easy to chop even though it's a death blow for any form of future. Military goes strong at first but will eventually be cut back dramatically. 1,000,000 soldiers don't mean crap if you need to load them on sailing ships to get them there, just ask the chinese. Research in anything non energy related will probably be cut way back. No need to cure cancer if they are starving and in the dark to begin with.

Anyways thats just my guess. I'm a doomer but I don't expect a mad max crash so much as a slowdown that goes into serious and unending depression mode.
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Unread postby Rickenbacker » Fri 03 Jun 2005, 20:40:40

Cheers Ron, though I can't find 'canary in the coal mine' as a thread, do you have a link?

Strider, thanks for the reply. To respond:

1) Thats kind of what I was thinking. Distribution of all goods will cost loads more, and plastic wont be as easy to get hold of perhaps so widely distributed hemetically sealed food will probably disappear. But will we (even in our 'developed' nations) run out of the basics?

2) Thats a really scary thought, that our debt ridden middle and lower classes will become serfs to the nobles who will take their property when the loans become unpayable. Though here in UK hardly anybody owns any land beyond the little tiny bit around your house, and even then most people have mortgages.

3) If we reduce the scope of our trade and uniform currencies, I feel we may well see the break up of large states (china, US, russia...) into smaller funtional units.

4/5) I agree that any industry reliant on cheap oil will suffer greatly if not disappear entirely, however I was wondering which other sectors will be affected by an economic downturn. Tourism, the service industry, luxury goods and financial services were some of my thoughts.
The picture you paint almost sounds like a military coup. Just military and agriculture? Surely we will have nuclear power en masse, and a rapidly growing alternative energy industry, even if it is just guys in vans building makeshift wind generators!


Do you know of any examples of modern economies crashing that would be worth studying with relevance to the current situation?
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Unread postby Raxozanne » Sat 04 Jun 2005, 02:21:27

Canary in the mineshaft link: http://www.peakoil.com/fortopic1605.html

You might want to read about Cuba and North Korea after the USSR shut down and cut them off from it's oil supply.
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Unread postby Rickenbacker » Sun 05 Jun 2005, 08:16:24

Cheers, I've been reading about the N. Korea situation, the graph of oil usage vs. food production is WOW. Not sure its just the oil though, losing all the spare parts produced from the soviet union would have been a significant factor, as were the series of natural disasters.

http://www.fromthewilderness.com/free/w ... uba_1.html

Doesnt look like part 2 exists yet, I'm trying to find something on cuba, so far Ive found this interesting if puny article -

http://www.greenleft.org.au/back/1992/79/79p6b.htm
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Unread postby bobcousins » Sun 05 Jun 2005, 12:29:11

It's all downhill from here
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Unread postby Rickenbacker » Sun 05 Jun 2005, 19:42:19

Sigh, its really depressing when you come to the realisation that this isn't some sort of conspiracy theory/ wack science type debate and realise you actually have to radically alter your life plans in order to better guarantee some sort of quality of life for the fairly near future. I'm 21, and in the past 6 months Ive:

- Decided not to have kids cos its going to be hard enough to sort my own life out.
- Lost all remaining faith in the usefullness of our media and government systems
- started SERIOUSLY worrying about the possibility of a global (nuclear?)conflict - good article - http://www.powerswitch.org.uk/portal/in ... 0&Itemid=2)
- decided that my (3/5 finished) degree in medicine is now valuable not for the reasons I initially opted for it, but will hopefully guarantee me rations, a place away from the front line if Im conscripted, and a globally valued skill

When you initially think about peak oil and consider possible plans it sounds so fanciful that it makes you, against all presented evidence, assume 'this MUST be wrong somehow'. But youve only got to look at the past to understand the present. And its a damn scary one. Eye of the hurricane, crest of the peak, edge of the cliff, whatever.

I'm using this http://www.peakoil.com/contentid-17.html as the start of a checklist for a survival library. If I do it reasonably quickly I'll try and turn it into a concise 'survival' website or a book. Though I haven't had a good look at www.survivingpeakoil.com or community solution yet.
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Re: Impact of PO on family life

Unread postby jdmartin » Sun 05 Jun 2005, 23:47:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Rickenbacker', 'I')m looking for the most informed opinion on the economic impact of peak oil, mainly on a family level, though obviously a thourough analysis will involve macroeconomics. Questions I'm looking for answers to include:

1) What will be the effect on goods in shops - will they just stop being delivered or will they become more expensive. If so which goods?

2) Pensions, loans, mortgages, other 'on paper' investments. What happens to them if there is an economic depression? Do the loans get defaulted or do the banks become heavies?

3) Do we think the current economic system will work or will we need to revert to local trade, different currencies, rationing?

4) Jobs, careers - which sectors will be hit first, and which ones will be worst affected?

5) Where will government resources be placed? Which sectors will lose out?

Answers to any would be appreciated, or links to other forum discussions, but I'd particularly like some expert opinions if anyones got any good links/reading suggestions.


Wow, that's a good post and everyone here has already posted good thoughts. Mine probably mirror some of the others but here's my 2 cents:

1. Ultimately things that are being made far away will become luxuries, regardless of whether it's a plastic chair made in China or Egyptian cotton sheets. That said, I think things of real value to those who still have wealth will still be made. I think Wal-Mart is SOL.

2. This area should be interesting. Things that have no intrinsic value (i.e. stocks, etc) stand to be brutalized the most. The bank can always come and get your house, though I suspect a smart US Gov't would simply try and prop up the banks and forbid large-scale foreclosures on the grounds that it would probably cause enough upheaval for revolution. I think a bunch of stuff will simply become worthless and be "written off" because there won't be any other real option.

3. The current economic system definitely won't work because it is too large in scale. Scaled down local economics is going to become all the rage because there won't be any other choice. I'm sure some things will end up having to be rationed because they'll be otherwise unaffordable or unavailable.

4. Most of the service stuff is going to be in a lot of trouble. No one needs a travel agent to stay home. Telemarketers will be in big trouble. Anyone selling non-essential information will be in trouble, i.e. design consultants, landscape designers. Arts will have a hard time of it. Careers of essential importance will be those that ensure safety (water and wastewater treatment, medical, engineering), those that can actually make things (manufacturers), and those that can grow things. Most local government jobs should be safe other than non-essentials (park & rec, for example). A lot of state and federal jobs might be in trouble, but then again the gov't has a way of increasing employment in bad times to keep the whole thing from going to crap.

5. Essentials, again. Creating enough food, clean water, and treating sewage.

Good post and I'm interested to see what others keep on saying.
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