by ennui2 » Tue 16 Feb 2016, 11:55:36
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('tita', '
')We can't just dissociate the 100$ period from the 30$ period as two different dynamics. It's the very same that is at work here. And IMHO BAU is not really working in both periods. I may be wrong of course, but future will tell us.
Right now the general public have been shielded from these issues. The debt is sitting on some ledger someplace out of sight, out of mind, while the economy (at least in the US) is still experiencing slow but steady growth and reduced unemployment. Commodities are cheap and store shelves are fully stocked.
BAU is still working. BAU working doesn't mean the economy must be totally healthy with a turkey in every pot. Recessions or even depressions are a part of BAU. BAU is the overall system. Just because things are dysfunctional doesn't mean BAU ends. It just means the world passes through a recession and out again, as it's done many times before.
For instance, when the credit crisis hit, Bank of America had huge liabilities on its books. And my account was with BoA and I was actually concerned it would go belly up. Economists kept talking about how the overhang simply could not go away, that the banks were insolvent, etc... Well, guess what? They bounced back. The carnage from the credit crisis was not insurmountable.
The same is true with the losses incurred from fracking. Pundits will theorize that somehow the debt will ripple through the country and cause economic armageddon, but we'll probably get through it intact enough to fund a 2nd wave of fracking when prices go up again.
"If the oil price crosses above the Etp maximum oil price curve within the next month, I will leave the forum." --SumYunGai (9/21/2016)