by AndyA » Sun 05 Jan 2014, 18:32:58
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I') believe your point is different regions/cultures/development-levels have different oil-price requirements? Yes, you are correct. A Bangladeshi farmer can make do with one $4.00/gal diesel once per day to pump his farm wells. An American corn farmers can also make do with $4.00, but he needs 100 gals each day. On other other hand, neither an Irish nor an Libyan office worker can stand that price. Oil needs are complex.
My point is that the decline after peak will be slower then just a generic decline from existing production because oil prices will rise, spurring new investment. In rebuttal to the argument that oil prices can't go any higher I give exhibit A. proving people can pay a lot more for gas.
I'm not sure why you claim an Irish office worker can't stand current prices? Oil needs are complex, if I only drove when it was absolutely essential I could afford to pay a much higher price for fuel. What I can see from the data is that people are paying the higher prices, driving a bit less (not quite enough to keep their fuel spend as low as it used to be) and getting on with life. QED the price is not yet too high.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')es. A lot of stuff including speculative housing, financial derivative bubble, resource/commodity manipulation, and either government intrusions, malfeasance or mere incompetence (depending on you POV) preceded the Depression. However one would be mistaken to consider these factors as causal. They were (and remain so) a consequence of $147/barrel oil and the inability of the American public to pay for both gas money and their consumer/retail shopping addiction--the basis of this economy.
Well I'm sure the 'sub-prime crisis' had something to do with it. The people getting these low-doc mortgages could never afford to pay them back, no matter what price fuel was. Once these mortgages went past the super low repayment introductory interest rate period, and the real repayments became due people stopped paying. Lehman, Bear et al were left holding the bag with thousands of these mortgages they were intending to bundle up and sell to greater fools. AIG had sold insurance on these bundles of loans to Goldman Sachs who new they were going to make money. The extra $10/week people were spending at the gas station instead of starbucks was just a small part of the bigger picture. Because in 2009 and 2010 fuel prices were down and they had an extra $10 week savings yet it didn't mean things went back to normal.