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More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby Seadragon » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 18:37:19

Or, the suburban housing construction industry?
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby keehah » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 19:04:28

I don't know what to make of all the "every thing is rosy with the US economy" MSM posts from sf3006 today.

sf3006 are you being ironic with a Peak Oil Audience skeptical of the powers that be serving the truth openly and thus would also be savvy to distortions in the reports of our economic conditions?

Examples: 'adjusted' 'core' inflation that distorts inflation low and at the same time raises GDP. And 'readjustments' of the statistics such as jobs reported and housing sales downward a month later. (ShadowStats.com)

sf3006 are you concerned our 'rosy ecomony' will not allow any demand destruction and shorten the arrival of Peak Oil effects?

Or are you an less enlightened flamer. Thinking we will lap up this pabulum?
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Re: BOOM: U.S. Adds 215,000 Jobs in November

Postby Vexed » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 20:00:23

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Re: Bush Optimistic About Growing Economy

Postby AmericanEmpire » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 20:06:46

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'E')nthusiasm about a growing economy, at this point, is like excitement about a metastasizing tumour.


Yeah really. I'm excited about all the extra energy this growth is gonna use. Whoohooo!
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Re: Bush Optimistic About Growing Economy

Postby Dukat_Reloaded » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 21:34:44

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Re: BOOM: U.S. Adds 215,000 Jobs in November

Postby marek » Fri 02 Dec 2005, 23:09:27

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Re: BOOM: U.S. Adds 215,000 Jobs in November

Postby GoIllini » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 00:07:55

So what? 215,000 new jobs created is not only going to help reverse that trend, it's also a signal that the economy's still growing strong- something that couldn't be happening within anything less than two or three years of the peak.

Two or three years gives us the time the market needs to turn peak oil from a doom-scenario to a sort of bumpy landing. Between the increasing popularity of HEVs, development in the areas of nuclear and wind (In anticipation of PHEVs and/or hydrogen), and CTL, and enormous drops in demand for low-MPG cars, we're going to see the equivalent of a $1 Trillion market-financed "mitigation program", as Hirsch would call it, in the next couple years leading up to peak oil. I think we might have already seen a couple hundred billion already in efforts to conserve over the past three years.

Thank goodness the party's ending now, rather than at peak oil. Perhaps rather than getting a doom-and-gloom scenario, we'll get something between the depression and a bad case of the '70s with at least two years for the market to get ready for high oil prices.
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Re: Bush Optimistic About Growing Economy

Postby GoIllini » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 00:29:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'E')nthusiasm about a growing economy, at this point, is like excitement about a metastasizing tumour.


Apparently, anything that makes peoples' lives better is carcinogenic. Of course, that's typical of many doomers.

I think it's a good sign- an indicator that peak oil might still be a few years off. That'll give the market time to get people into conservation mode, get HEV's available, and get utilities thinking about the implications of PHEVs, hybrids, and electric cars on electricity demand.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby GoIllini » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 00:37:14

How are we fueling all of this growth? By using more energy.

Think about it for a minute; while it's not a good sign for those of us expecting a peak in 2015, it's an excellent sign for those of us worried about a peak in 2005 or 2006. We wouldn't be seeing this kind of job creation if oil had already peaked.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby MonteQuest » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 01:02:22

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', 'H')ow are we fueling all of this growth?


By borrowing $3 billion a day from the central banks, selling our houses to each other, and going to the refi-ATM to cash out the inflated price, then making a trip to Wal-mart to buy Chinese goods.

Repeat as needed.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby GoIllini » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 01:28:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', 'H')ow are we fueling all of this growth?


By borrowing $3 billion a day from the central banks, selling our houses to each other, and going to the refi-ATM to cash out the inflated price, then making a trip to Wal-mart to buy Chinese goods.

Repeat as needed.


Yeah, but where are we getting the energy for this growth? You've said it yourself before- jobs take energy, right?

Whether or not the U.S. has a financial crisis, it looks like Peak Oil is way off.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby MonteQuest » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 01:29:58

GoIllini,

What planet are you on?

Care to back up these statements of yours?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')wo or three years gives us the time the market needs to turn peak oil from a doom-scenario to a sort of bumpy landing.


The invisible hand of the market? :P

I doubt 30 years is enough.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby GoIllini » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 01:50:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', 'G')oIllini,

What planet are you on?

Care to back up these statements of yours?

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')wo or three years gives us the time the market needs to turn peak oil from a doom-scenario to a sort of bumpy landing.


The invisible hand of the market? :P

I doubt 30 years is enough.


I'll be happy to do it. However, seeing as you're a moderator who usually tells the optimists to not get off topic on the doomer topics, I'll help you set a good example and answer your question in a new topic.

The point is that peak oil isn't here yet. That's good news for the U.S. economy.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby MonteQuest » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 03:21:12

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MonteQuest', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('GoIllini', 'H')ow are we fueling all of this growth?


By borrowing $3 billion a day from the central banks, selling our houses to each other, and going to the refi-ATM to cash out the inflated price, then making a trip to Wal-mart to buy Chinese goods.

Repeat as needed.


Yeah, but where are we getting the energy for this growth? You've said it yourself before- jobs take energy, right?

Whether or not the U.S. has a financial crisis, it looks like Peak Oil is way off.


Same place we always have.

Way off? Production doesn't decline on the way up the peak.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby Seadragon » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 11:14:07

Monte, did you conjure this guy up to give yourself something to do? He's getting funnier in every post...oh yes peak oil is way off, lol.
Exporting oil is an act of treason"-- Heitor Manoel Pereira, president of AEPET in Brazil, January 06, 2006
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby smiley » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 13:43:09

Yeah the economy is booming, jobs are falling from the trees, inflation is tame and Santa Claus is sitting next to me.

If you want to believe the FOX/FED good news show than that is your choice. If you want too make a serious assesment on the shape of the US economy you need to look with a bit more scrutiny and not just post stuff from the AP.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby KingM » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 19:51:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smiley', 'Y')eah the economy is booming, jobs are falling from the trees, inflation is tame and Santa Claus is sitting next to me.

If you want to believe the FOX/FED good news show than that is your choice. If you want too make a serious assesment on the shape of the US economy you need to look with a bit more scrutiny and not just post stuff from the AP.


That's right, you should instead take your information from an internet board filled with people talking out their asses about economics even though they have no training or expertise in same.
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby BO » Sat 03 Dec 2005, 21:21:34

Montequest wrote:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')onteQuest wrote:
GoIllini,

What planet are you on?

Care to back up these statements of yours?

Quote:
Two or three years gives us the time the market needs to turn peak oil from a doom-scenario to a sort of bumpy landing.


The invisible hand of the market? Razz

I doubt 30 years is enough.


Interestingly enough, that is at least the second time in a few weeks that "GoIllini" was asked what planet he or she was from. I wrote on another topic:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')oIllini wrote:
And tiny infusions of capital and experts from the first world is truly
making a world of difference in the third world. America will have
plenty of knowledge at home to set this up. I wouldn't worry.

I wrote:
I am now seriously wondering what planet you are from. The World Bank says by 2015 two thirds of the worlds population will not have potable water. Somewhere around 35 million people die every year from contaminated water. Globalization is causing devastation all over the world creating riots, protests and war. Perhaps you only read American press. Here is one that didn't make it into the New York Times:

Quote:
Hunger in America rises by 43 percent over last five years
More than 38 million Americans go hungry, including nearly 14 million children
Waltham, MA, Oct. 28, 2005 –Hunger in American households has risen by 43 percent over the last five years, according to an analysis of US Department of Agriculture (USDA) data released today. The analysis, completed by the Center on Hunger and Poverty at Brandeis University, shows that more than 7 million people have joined the ranks of the hungry since 1999.

The USDA report, Household Food Security in the United States, 2004, says that 38.2 million Americans live in households that suffer directly from hunger and food insecurity, including nearly 14 million children. That figure is up from 31 million Americans in 1999.

"This is an unexpected and even stunning outcome," noted center director Dr. J. Larry Brown, a leading scholarly authority on domestic hunger. "This chronic level of hunger so long after the recession ended means that it is a man-made problem. Congress and the White House urgently need to address growing income inequality and the weakening of the safety net in order to get this epidemic under control." According to the Center on Hunger and Poverty, food insecurity increased by nearly a million households from 2003 to 2004. Rates of hunger increased in almost every single category of household during the same time, with single mothers and those living in or near poverty continuing to suffer from severely high rates of both food insecurity and hunger.

California, Texas, Arkansas, Missouri, North Carolina, New Mexico, Oklahoma and South Carolina all have food insecurity and hunger rates that are significantly higher than the national average. The lone bright spot in the nation is Oregon. Once considered to have the worst hunger in the country, Oregon has shown significant decreases in food insecurity and hunger since 1999-2001.

"With this astonishing level of food deprivation in America," Brown concluded, "we need President Bush to step up to the plate. If he now asks Congress to cut federal food programs, hunger will increase even further. We need the moral leadership to stem this crisis."



Montequest, don't even get into an arguement with this troll, he doesn't even respond to empirical evidence, nor does he back up his statements, just makes all the facts "fit" into his worldview. Here is his response to one of my posts:

GoIllini wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')O wrote:
Are you still Lurking?

Do the math,

Whenever there is an oil spill, GDP goes up, whenever someone is diagnosed with cancer, GDP goes up, whenever a forest falls, GDP goes up.

Ah, yes. You must have seen Affluenza, too. I found it to be a relatively shallow movie, but we all have our own opinions.

Yes; whenever we have an oil spill or a cancer diagnosis, more work is created. However, at the end of the year, GDP is calculated by adding up gains made by taxpayers.

Most people are insured; insurance companies get to write off the cost of treating cancer. If an oil spill affects properties, homeowners get to write that off, in the long run. Same if it affects fish. When a forest loses economic value when someone cuts it down, they get to write that off, too.


Let me ask you something GoIllini, do you even know what "writing it off" means? I do, I am an Enrolled Agent, licensed by the Department of Treasury, to represent taxpayers in front of the IRS, if you would like to discuss taxes, I would be happy to. Tell me what you know, and how "write offs" benefit "taxpayers" with regard to GDP.

Also, guess what, it takes about 190,000 jobs created a month, just to stay even with the workers coming into the market, so 215,000 created is a joke, it is just a little more than enough to meet demand for jobs, by about 25,000, and if I remember correctly, 40,000 of those were service jobs. How many people who used to have high paying jobs went to work for Walmart last month? Do they keep that statistic?
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby CARVER » Sun 04 Dec 2005, 10:54:19

The way I see it is not whether we are doing a lot more or we are paying eachother a lot more - which can result in a booming economy - but what we are doing. We are providing services and producing goods, and we consume them. Since we are not doing the things we should be doing to prepare, that means to me that this 'booming' economy is just wasting more time and resources, which is only making the problem worse.

So what is happening:
- Are we stocking up on resources: metals, energy, etc. in preparation for PO? Or are we using them just to build more McMansions, SUV's, etc. just for our pleasure today and that will have hardly any value to us in the future?
- Are the new jobs created in sectors that we will need after PO? Or are those jobs created just to increase our current standard of living instead of our future standard of living?
- Are more and more people racking up debt in order to invest in their future? Or do they use it to just consume today?

So is what we are doing today going to help in the future? Does it really matter how fast the money flows today when we are not preparing. We are just redistributing the money at the moment, we are just repositioning ourselves before we start preparing. What matters is where the money is once we start to prepare, what the distribution is of money and ownership of resources, because then everybody is going to bid for the essential resources. With just a single dollar you could in theory run an entire economy, if the money velocity would be huge (that single dollar would change hands so fast that it would not be visible to the naked eye). You could have say a yearly billion dollar economy, right? But what if suddenly one person decides to hold on to that dollar, take it out of circulation, that would stop the entire economy, because money stopped flowing. So when resources get scarce, do you think people will still give you another loan so that you can outbid them for part of the resources they need/want? It is likely that those with the resources will sell them to the highest bidder. If someone can outbid you, that means you are not getting those resources. So if you will need to buy those resources because you don't own them yourself, then it is not good when you are heavily in debt. If you have valuable skills then you will probably be kept in the loop, if not then you've got a big problem.

I see it like a variation of the game 'musical chairs', where the music has been playing for a long time. Some people wanted to hear a different song, and they sold a chair to the other players and in return they got to pick the song. So once the music stops those people are not allowed to sit on that particular chair. But the new song kept on playing and they got tired of that one as well, so they sold another chair, and another, and another, and ... While the music is playing not much changes for them, they might need to walk a bit faster in between available chairs, because there are less chairs available for them. So while the music is playing everybody is in more or less the same situation. During the game we get an hourly update of how we are doing, since picking songs is highly valuable and the number of available chairs to you has little value while the music is playing, those who get to pick the music are told that they are doing great, the value they gained on picking the songs greatly outweighs the value of the seats they gave up for it. However, when the music stops and everybody races to sit on one of the to them available chairs, then suddenly a lot of those people that got to pick the songs find themselves without a chair. Those people thought they were doing great, because they got to pick the songs they liked, and since the music had been playing for so long they thought the music would never stop. When the music stops it becomes a totally different game. Having a chair suddenly becomes very valuable, which it was not while the music was playing. Getting to pick the songs has no value at all once the music ain't playing, it will have some value again once the music starts playing again, but by that time you will probably be eliminated from the game because you didn't get a chair.

If more money is flowing faster today, that does not mean that things are looking better for the future, and that you can better handle the blow once it hits. Because once it hits that all changes, and those jobs could disappear just as easily. If we would be actually preparing for the future that would be good. Is the economy booming because we are not preparing yet?
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Re: More Signs Of A Booming Economy

Postby RacerJace » Sun 04 Dec 2005, 23:11:23

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BO', 'M')ontequest wrote:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')onteQuest wrote:
GoIllini,

What planet are you on?

.....

Montequest, don't even get into an arguement with this troll, he doesn't even respond to empirical evidence, nor does he back up his statements, just makes all the facts "fit" into his worldview. Here is his response to one of my posts:

....


I found the "ignor" button works quite nicely on GoIllini.

Like many.. at first I bit back, then raised an eybrow, then laughed, frowned, grit my teeth and finally hit ignor. This guy is stupid and intellectually dishonest and has a pass time of potificating crapola. :evil:
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