by Rochester » Tue 28 Jun 2005, 17:09:27
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'N')o, people will get laid off of their jobs just because gas has reached $5 per gallon. Reducing the number of vehicles on the road to 1/7 of the current level, as suggested above means a 6/7 reduction in disposable stuff, like tire usage, repairs, oil changes, etc. but in the long run, a 6/7 reduction in vehicle purchases. This trickles up stream: Fewer cars, fewer car salesmen, fewer people at the DMV, fewer loan officers at the bank, fewer people at the insurance company, less road construction and maintenance, less concrete and asphalt, less steel and rubber and chemicals. Before you know it, it goes through the whole economy, banking, financial, communications, right up to the government themselves.
Granted it wont be painless, but that's only half of it. There will be plenty of people getting big fat raises because oil companies will be rich with profits, rail companies will be booming again, utilities will be expanding as electricity demand grows to compensate, all of those commuters will be able to buy books and newspapers to read on their commute, telecommunications companies might make a profit again as telecommuting increases, many jobs shifted overseas may even come home as local roduction becomes a bigger factor in costs, etc...
There will be winners and their growth to some extent will soften the transition. At the end of WWII most workers were at factories, now they are not. At the beginning of the century most workers were in agriculture, now they are not. The transitions were painful, but not all one sided.