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Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Sat 19 Nov 2005, 18:05:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', '
')Science also shows some things are inherently unpredictable. Have you not heard of chaos theory? The butterfly effect? Non-linear systems? Weather forecasts?

If you are relying on Newtons laws of motion, you are about 200 years out of date.

You also begging the question "What is the purpose of economics?" The purpose of economics is not to provide long term management of the planet. It is to allow people to make money.

Honestly dude, you are barking up the wrong tree.


Interesting! :)

Let's not use the Economics forum to get into Einstein's relativity and quantum mechanics.

I quote from my copy of "Chaos-Making a New Science" by James Gleick, 1987
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')The Science of chaos cuts across traditional scientific disciplines , tying together unrelated kinds of wildness and irregularity: from the turbulence of weather, to the complicated rhythms of the human heart, from the design of snowflakes, to the whorls of windswept desert sands.

Highly mathematical in its origin, chaos nonetheless is a science of the everyday world, addressing questions that every child has wondered about: how clouds form, how smoke rises, how water eddies in a stream

,
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby jaws » Sat 19 Nov 2005, 18:15:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('bobcousins', '
')You also begging the question "What is the purpose of economics?" The purpose of economics is not to provide long term management of the planet. It is to allow people to make money.

No, making money is inflationary. :P The purpose of economics is to find the best way of economizing scarce resources.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby advancedatheist » Sat 19 Nov 2005, 19:20:41

Michael Perelman argues that mainstream economics gets natural resources wrong because it assumes that you can discount the future, and that every resource has a substitute if the price for the original resource rises high enough. (Regarding the latter assumption, I guess economists don't study basic physical science.) What happens when you finally arrive at the resource-depleted "long run" this way of thinking rationalized?
"There was a time before reason and science when my ancestors believed in all manner of nonsense." Narim on <I>Stargate SG-1</i>.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Sat 19 Nov 2005, 20:19:36

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('advancedatheist', '[')url=http://www.globalpublicmedia.com/transcripts/409]Michael Perelman[/url] argues that mainstream economics gets natural resources wrong because it assumes that you can discount the future, and that every resource has a substitute if the price for the original resource rises high enough. (


Thanks very much for the link. :-D

Michael Perelman seems to be an economist who at least realizes the problem of finite resources and THAT is a good first step for economics. I am going to try to get his book.

I listened to the entire confirmation hearing of Ben Bernanke, not so much for the specifics, but to get a feel for how he thinks. One Senator asked some pointed questions implying." how would Bernanke help the American people cope with soaring natural gas prices?" I can paraphrase his answer something like, " Senator, monetary policy can't do anything about soaring natural gas prices, rather my job will be to manage the dislocations of the higher prices on the economy". I sort of took it as meaning it didn't matter how high natural gas prices got, they will be "managed". A fundamental lack of supply did not enter the answer.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby ubercynicmeister » Sat 19 Nov 2005, 21:03:10

The long and the short of it - and it's surprising that no-one else has responded to your question in this way is: YES, modern economic theory is utterly flawed, and Matt Savinar points this out very cleverly both at his website and in his book. Note well: ALL OF WHAT I WRITE BELOW HAS BEEN WRITTEN BEFORE AT THIS AND OTHER WEB-SITES ASSOCIATED WITH PEAK OIL. I am merely condensing and gathering the remarks together.

Firstly John Maynard Keynes almost got it right, when he said that the govt has a role and a right and, indeed, an obligation to "do" things within the economy, to stabilise it, to help the sections of Society that cannot help themselves.

So far, so good. Then along came the Oil Shocks of the 1970's and the whole basis of Keynesian Economics came under fire from one Professor Friedman who won the Nobel Prize for Economics (they musta been handing them out on the side of breakfast cereal containers that year) for his theory, which we now know as "Economic Rationalism", also "Freemarket Fundamentalism".

The change from a centrally planned economy to a free market one was supposed to bring us eternal wealth, health, happiness and every form of boon, benefit, pleasant thing and we're all (supposedly) deliriously happy if we wear what another Friedman called "the golden straight-jacket".

This is the economy we presently endure, and - even when Oil was ridiculously cheap - freemarket economy after freemarket economy foundered, collapsed, and generally shook itself to bits like the out-of-balance machine it really is.

Take Japan. After years of an Economic Boom, in the Post World War 2 period, marked mostly by protectionism, central planning and Government regulation of the Economy, the Japanese decided in the 1980's to introduce some freemarket reforms: floating the currency, deregulated banks, and the investment sector, etc etc.

Their economy, after experiencing growth in certain sectors that can only be described as "absurdly over-optimistic" - while other areas stagnated - the Japanese Economy has inverted, collapsed and is still heading downwards. Japan, in the most optimistic estimates, has been bumping along on the bottom since the collapse of it's share-market in the early 1990's. The share-market boom, it turns out, was driven by by Japanese women investing their husband's money without said Hubby knowing about it, and thereby both of 'em ended up losing everything . It should be noted that Oil was a whole lot cheaper THEN than it is NOW.

Japan still hasn't gotten over what the deregulation did to it's economy. Always the promise that "once the transition to a free-market economy is finished, the pain will be over", yet always that transition seems to always further off, always it seems to occupy more time, more resources, more consultants need to be paid, more pain needs to be inflicted with zero gain for the general population, more uncertainty, more time-wasting, more debt, more spending-on-credit.

Mind you, some people are doing exceedingly well out of it - the consultants. for example.

Japan is a microcosm for the rest of the West, too - in every economy that has tried Freemarket Reforms, they have seen their economies flop (Australia - we're supposedly "booming" right now - pity no-ones told the real economy, which is actually stagnating). And all of this BEFORE the price of Oil went up. Don't forget - Japan was the World's Second Largest Economy before it started Freemarket Reforms. Now, it's Number 3 and going down. Japan, BTW, imports all of it's Oil, and most of it's coal.

Now we see that while Keynes got it mostly right, he left out one huge part of the reality that scuppered his ideas some 40 years after they were introduced (note: this is a better track-record than Freemarket Fundamentalism / Economic Rationalism, which has wrecked everything in about 25 years) . The part he left out was, of course, energy.

In our civilisation, thanks to the Industrial vandalism of the 1950's and 60's, we are entirely dependant for our energy on one form of it: Oil, in some form or other.

Nuclear Energy doesn't need oil, you say? Well, think about the way that the 'fuel' gets to the reactor: a diesel powered digger extracts the ore and loads it onto a diesel powered truck, which takes the ore to the processing plant, where diesel powered equipment turns it into something that is more easily transported. Another diesel powered truck then takes it to a port, where a diesel powered ship takes it off to the fuel-making plant, usually clear on the other side of the world.

So, if we start to run outta Oil where's all this diesel coming from?

This is why there's now a movement on to start to introduce "energy" economics - where the physics takes precedence over the money.

Both Keynesian Economics AND Economic Rationalism place the importance of money above that of everything else. In a sense, they are right - if enough people believe that money matters most, they'll be more quiescent when someone with money tries to order them around. Thus "money matters most" becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Energy is made from Money, Money acts without concern over energy or energy prices, say both the Keynesians and the Economic Rationalists.

Energy economics (from the little I understand of it) places energy at the heart, with money at the periphery, where it should be. Money is made from energy, says energy economics. Money cannot act or even exist without an underlying support of energy in whatever that form - be it the energy of human power, they energy of Oil, the energy of solar power, the energy of nuclear power, the energy of some exotic source, like (say) Zero Point Energy.

The easier the energy is to extract, the cheaper it will be. For example, Oil when it was first discovered, was incredibly expensive - no-one used it, because the damn stuff was too hard and too expensive to transport, to refine and to use. Then someone figured out how to get all of the above happening cheaply, and voila! An Oil Boom.

It is said that, at one stage, the amount of energy (in barrels of oil) needed to be put into drilling an oil well was 1/100th that of the amount that came out of the Oil well.

This created wealth. It did so by driving costs associated with everything down. In that sense the Economic Rationalists were certainly right: if one lowers cost, one gets wealthier. Where the Economic Rationalists got it wrong was the one might reduce costs - but only by money invested in the first place. Stopping spending money is not the same as reducing costs. The 'fly in the ointment' for both Keynesian and Economic Rationalist Economics comes along later - when the source of energy starts to get a little shaky, or supply and demand are equal - or demand exceeds supply, even by a small amount.

Then the Freemarket "Bull" (so called because of the amount of bull that is used to help inflate already over-hyped stocks) turns bear, and starts to maul people.

This is what we're seeing now.

I hope I've answered your question.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby jaws » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 00:08:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('advancedatheist', '[')url=http://www.globalpublicmedia.com/transcripts/409]Michael Perelman[/url] argues that mainstream economics gets natural resources wrong because it assumes that you can discount the future, and that every resource has a substitute if the price for the original resource rises high enough. (Regarding the latter assumption, I guess economists don't study basic physical science.) What happens when you finally arrive at the resource-depleted "long run" this way of thinking rationalized?

There's nothing wrong with discounting. From what I've read of Perelman, he's a red, and is just pushing his good old red agenda.

Discounting works because you are discounting the future price, not the future supply of the resource. If you have a resource with a lot of substitutes, the future price will not rise much (elasticity is high) because everyone will switch to some other resource. The discounting process will then make most of the resource available in the present. If you have a resource without substitutes then obviously a diminution in supply will cause large price hikes on the market, therefore discounting will still leave you with a fairly even production path year-after-year into the future.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 15:02:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ubercynicmeister', 'T')he long and the short of it - and it's surprising that no-one else has responded to your question in this way is: YES, modern economic theory is utterly flawed, ...
...
Energy economics (from the little I understand of it) places energy at the heart, with money at the periphery, where it should be. Money is made from energy, says energy economics. Money cannot act or even exist without an underlying support of energy in whatever that form - be it the energy of human power, they energy of Oil, the energy of solar power, the energy of nuclear power, the energy of some exotic source, like (say) Zero Point Energy.
.


I want to thank you for introducing me to the term "Energy Economics" as a separate branch of economics. I did a google search and turned up the website of the United States Association for Energy Economics (USAEE) with several pdf files of their newsletters:

http://www.usaee.org/newsletter/

Several of these papers introduce complexity into the issue of why free market economic theory as defined by the US and its partners produces flawed economic future results. Other people do not play by the same rules, and bureaucratic organizations make decisions based on bureaucratic self interest rather than free market principles. Saudi Arabia is a monarchy, China still uses Marxist principles, Russia is moving back to state run oil companies, Chavez in Venezuela is a loose cannon. I doubt any of these players use Milton Friedman economic principles in their decisions, except as a guide of how to take advantage of economic systems that do. We need to appreciate we are dealing with people whose whole world outlook is different from ours, and not use our value system in predicting their behavior.

I realized that the major players in today's energy world DO NOT practice free market economic principles, but rather are guided by self interest in almost pure Adam Smith fashion. Self interest defined broadly as a long term strategy quite different from maximizing short term profits.

Saudi Arabia clearly is not a free market society ,is dominated by fundamentalist Islam, and has a Monarchy style government. Ferdinand Banks (Sweden) suggests the Saudi's may be using game theory to further their own aims. He suggests that the Saudi goal is to increase oil production for their own use ( a growing population) and increased production of petrochemicals, rather than supplying the world market with raw crude oil. The result may a Saudi policy they articulated many decades ago that they need to stretch their reserves many generations to come. The result is they may tell us they could provide 20 MM bbls/ day in the future, but have no plans to do so.

Doug Reynolds discussed a new term for me, "Hotelling" of oil.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he hotelling principle suggests that some oil producers may conserve oil now to get a better price in the future. Waiting to produce, or at least not expanding production, will increase the present value of oil


Reynolds goes on to discuss the aversion to risk in the large State controlled oil companies in many OPEC countries, with the tendency of monopolies to be very inefficient in expanding oil production.

Then I read on The Oil Drum an inside look on how major oil companies really work.
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/11/17/231712/08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hese multinationals are large bureaucracies. They are organized presumably to maximize return on investment for their investors. Like all bureaucracies, however, internal politics plays a big role in ultimately how they are organized and how effective they are as businesses. Despite aspirations to put the whole company first, many parts of these organizations look like Dilbert Comic Strips crossed with the movie Office Space.


One description of a bureaucrat I liked is :

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ureaucrats,: Do what it takes to protect or expand their position; Will divert responsibility whenever possible, but will take credit for desirable results of others; The success of the organization is secondary to kissing up to those who make decisions about promotions, salaries and job security; Have virtually no control over their job security; And are compensated for basically showing up.


We have all read the professional difficuties M. King Hubbert encountered when he published his orginal work on Peak Oil. Only now is he being vindicated and appreciated. He broke out of the bureaucracy of his day.

Most economists have staff positions in their organizations. Their own self interest means they will "go along" with "group think" even when it sends their organization over a cliff.

I have come to no conclusions yet, but want to thank all the posters here for their comments. It is a very complex subject 8O 8O
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 16:36:33

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', '
')There's nothing wrong with discounting. From what I've read of Perelman, he's a red, and is just pushing his good old red agenda.

Discounting works because you are discounting the future price, not the future supply of the resource. If you have a resource with a lot of substitutes, the future price will not rise much (elasticity is high) because everyone will switch to some other resource. The discounting process will then make most of the resource available in the present. If you have a resource without substitutes then obviously a diminution in supply will cause large price hikes on the market, therefore discounting will still leave you with a fairly even production path year-after-year into the future.


A quote by Pereman from the link above RE discounting( note, I bracketed one word which I assume is a transcription error in this radio interview):

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Now, if you were to discount at the rate that corporations do, say, 10 to 20 percent per year, the world 100 years from now would be virtually worthless because the value falls very, very rapidly with a high discount rate. So in this way the economy [doesn't?] disregards the future.


Jaws, could you elaborate about your last sentence re " fairly even production rate"? If the resource is limited doesn't the supply steadily decline, even with an increasing price?
The picture I have anyway, is we will never run out of oil. Existing reservoirs will still be producing steadily declining dribbles of oil for centuries at increasing price.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby ubercynicmeister » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 18:48:33

Hi Donshan.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('ubercynicmeister', 'T')he long and the short of it - and it's surprising that no-one else has responded to your question in this way is: YES, modern economic theory is utterly flawed, ...
...
Energy economics (from the little I understand of it) places energy at the heart, with money at the periphery, where it should be. Money is made from energy, says energy economics. Money cannot act or even exist without an underlying support of energy in whatever that form - be it the energy of human power, they energy of Oil, the energy of solar power, the energy of nuclear power, the energy of some exotic source, like (say) Zero Point Energy.
.


I want to thank you for introducing me to the term "Energy Economics" as a separate branch of economics. I did a google search and turned up the website of the United States Association for Energy Economics (USAEE) with several pdf files of their newsletters:

http://www.usaee.org/newsletter/


I'm surprised that others had not introduced you to it. It seems a sort of basic thing to me. This idiotic Economic Rationalist obsession with everlasting unsupported expansion is killing us all (especially if we stop spending money on energy resources research..."OH, look, the supply of energy has always climbed before, therefore it must continue to climb!"). Admittedly, Keynesian Economics also asks for everlasting growth, but at least it tries to put some of the profits back into the research side of things.

Matt Savinar points out - unless we get to a "steady state" theory of economics (where I assume we do a series of undulations...a little rise followed by a little fall, followed by another little rise) then we will see "Peak Oil" repeated - even if we discover some replacement for Oil tomorrow, and have it "in place" by next Wednesday, the same "Peak-Whatever-it-is" will happen again and again.

Oil, and it's depletion, is not the problem.

Human population growth is not the problem.

What is the problem is the relentless drive for expansion - via that most insidious of means, interest, especially compound interest.

My own theory is that interest (ie: money supposedly for nothing, if you're the lender) charged on loans is why we saw large population growth, NOT the other way around.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', 'S')everal of these papers introduce complexity into the issue of why free market economic theory as defined by the US and its partners produces flawed economic future results. Other people do not play by the same rules, and bureaucratic organizations make decisions based on bureaucratic self interest rather than free market principles. Saudi Arabia is a monarchy,


Yes, true.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', ' ')China still uses Marxist principles,


China, for all of the bemoaning done about how awful the place is, both here and in other "forums" well, it's the ONLY country that has had continuous growth - and that at 9.5% per annum for 20 years.

It has done the exact opposite of everything the idiotic Freemarket Fundamentalists have done: China has never floated it's Renmimbi currency.

China retains control (ie: 50% ownership) of it's industries.

China has various Trade Barriers (ie: they can send you goods, you cannot send them goods, except if they really want it)

China is literally rolling in loot. It is now the 2nd largest holder of US foreign reserves. It has been buying up companies left, right, and centre all the way around the world.

It has a Trade Deficit, all right - in China's favour, MASSIVELY.

In 2007, China will become the World's Largest Economy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', ' ')Russia is moving back to state run oil companies, Chavez in Venezuela is a loose cannon.

No, Chavez has been massively misrepresented by the US media. He's actually hated by the rich elite (who wanna overthrow him because he doesn't gouge the poor), and the US backs the rich elite (just like it did in Vietnam). Just like the US did in Cuba. The real deal is that Chavez is putting the money he's getting from Oil back into the local economy, via help for the disadvataged, via research into energy resources, via "milk and bricks" in the form of food and schooling for the poor, something the Oil Industry agreed to have done years ago. The rich elite, who were making massive profits from the Oil Industry, siphoning almost all of the profits off without allowing the Oil Company to re-invest in itself, as it were, even as their countrymen starved, well, the Elite hate him for it.

He's not a loose cannon, just he's been represented that way in the US media.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', ' ') I doubt any of these players use Milton Friedman economic principles in their decisions, except as a guide of how to take advantage of economic systems that do. We need to appreciate we are dealing with people whose whole world outlook is different from ours, and not use our value system in predicting their behavior.

"World outlook" has nothing to do with it - we all see (and correctly complain) that the "oil-wealth" has not flowed ("trickled down") onto all of the Population, especially in certain African countries. Yet when Hugo Chavez takes our complaints at face value and passes the wealth on to everyone equally, we call him a loose cannon.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', 'I') realized that the major players in today's energy world DO NOT practice free market economic principles, but rather are guided by self interest in almost pure Adam Smith fashion. Self interest defined broadly as a long term strategy quite different from maximizing short term profits.

Scott Adams of Dilbert fame, once defined Re-engineering the Corporation as "Like giving yourself an appendectomy. You have no guarentee of success, it'll hurt a lot, but if you do succeed, it will give you enough false confidence to go after something really vital, like that big, red, pumping thing."

"Enlightened" self-interest is exactly the same. While the short-term outlook results in immediate catastrophe, the longer-term outlook has this habit of taking a bit longer to get to the same destination. I think we should start aiming for what the Ancient Chinese philosophers said, in the Analects:

The Master said: (the good man) does not grieve that other people do not recognise his merits. His only anxiety is lest he should fail to recognise theirs.

Kuo Yu (Chapter 18): "Only a good man can be liked, can be disliked. For if you like him, he will not exploit it, and if you dislike him, he will not resent it."

The Master Said: 'Never do to others what you would not like them to do to you.'


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', 'S')audi Arabia clearly is not a free market society ,is dominated by fundamentalist Islam, and has a Monarchy style government. Ferdinand Banks (Sweden) suggests the Saudi's may be using game theory to further their own aims. He suggests that the Saudi goal is to increase oil production for their own use ( a growing population) and increased production of petrochemicals, rather than supplying the world market with raw crude oil. The result may a Saudi policy they articulated many decades ago that they need to stretch their reserves many generations to come. The result is they may tell us they could provide 20 MM bbls/ day in the future, but have no plans to do so.

Doug Reynolds discussed a new term for me, "Hotelling" of oil.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he hotelling principle suggests that some oil producers may conserve oil now to get a better price in the future. Waiting to produce, or at least not expanding production, will increase the present value of oil

Reynolds goes on to discuss the aversion to risk in the large State controlled oil companies in many OPEC countries, with the tendency of monopolies to be very inefficient in expanding oil production.

Then I read on The Oil Drum an inside look on how major oil companies really work.
http://www.theoildrum.com/story/2005/11/17/231712/08

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hese multinationals are large bureaucracies. They are organized presumably to maximize return on investment for their investors. Like all bureaucracies, however, internal politics plays a big role in ultimately how they are organized and how effective they are as businesses. Despite aspirations to put the whole company first, many parts of these organizations look like Dilbert Comic Strips crossed with the movie Office Space.

One description of a bureaucrat I liked is :

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'B')ureaucrats,: Do what it takes to protect or expand their position; Will divert responsibility whenever possible, but will take credit for desirable results of others; The success of the organization is secondary to kissing up to those who make decisions about promotions, salaries and job security; Have virtually no control over their job security; And are compensated for basically showing up.

We have all read the professional difficuties M. King Hubbert encountered when he published his orginal work on Peak Oil. Only now is he being vindicated and appreciated. He broke out of the bureaucracy of his day.

Most economists have staff positions in their organizations. Their own self interest means they will "go along" with "group think" even when it sends their organization over a cliff.

I have come to no conclusions yet, but want to thank all the posters here for their comments. It is a very complex subject 8O 8O

LOL, you desperately need to read The Art Of Demotivation Especially the bit on "teams". It's one of the most subversive, damning idictments of this modern clueless idea of "teamwork" (where the laziest big mouth takes credit for the hard work done by people who end up too exhausted to alert those outside the team to how much work they've put in).
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby jaws » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 19:46:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('donshan', 'A') quote by Pereman from the link above RE discounting( note, I bracketed one word which I assume is a transcription error in this radio interview):

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')Now, if you were to discount at the rate that corporations do, say, 10 to 20 percent per year, the world 100 years from now would be virtually worthless because the value falls very, very rapidly with a high discount rate. So in this way the economy [doesn't?] disregards the future.


Jaws, could you elaborate about your last sentence re " fairly even production rate"? If the resource is limited doesn't the supply steadily decline, even with an increasing price?
The picture I have anyway, is we will never run out of oil. Existing reservoirs will still be producing steadily declining dribbles of oil for centuries at increasing price.

You're missing a variable in your equation, price elasticity. If price elasticity is low, discounting will not result in severely falling supply. If a 1% fall in supply causes a 10% increase in prices for example, then a 5% discount rate will not cause supply to fall from one year to the next. Natural resource owners will want to stay put and earn the (10%-5%) appreciation as profit. If all resource proprietors act the same way, the price in the present will rise and the expected price in the future will fall because the current supply is being limited in favor of the future. For low elasticity resources, supply will thus fall very slowly.

For a high elasticity resource, one which has many simple substitutes (energy for example), then price appreciation caused by a fall in demand is much narrowers. A 1% fall in supply might cause a less than 1% increase in prices due to buyers switching to some other resource. It then makes sense for reserve proprietors to sell as much as they can in the present and lock in profits that will earn 5% interest a year (what discounting is based on) instead of waiting for subsequent periods and lose the profits, as well as the market share against competing resources.

The problem with oil is that we're really not sure how substitutable it is. If it's just a highly profitable form of energy like any other, then the market for reserves will drive up the price until it's equivalent to other forms. If it's a unique resource that we can't do without then the elasticity is very low and it pays to preserve. My belief is that many of the current uses for oil are highly substitutable, however there is a small share that is unique and not substitutable. Until supply has fallen so low that only the unsubstitutable needs are being supplied, conservation of oil is going to be less important a consideration to oil suppliers than competition from alternative energy.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 21:28:02

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jaws', 'T')he problem with oil is that we're really not sure how substitutable it is. If it's just a highly profitable form of energy like any other, then the market for reserves will drive up the price until it's equivalent to other forms. If it's a unique resource that we can't do without then the elasticity is very low and it pays to preserve. My belief is that many of the current uses for oil are highly substitutable, however there is a small share that is unique and not substitutable. Until supply has fallen so low that only the unsubstitutable needs are being supplied, conservation of oil is going to be less important a consideration to oil suppliers than competition from alternative energy.


Thanks for the explanation. I was not thinking about substitution for oil by some other energy source.

Regarding substitution, the paper by Doug Reynolds I mentioned above in USAEE( Assoc Prof. Univ of Alaska) cited one of his own books from 2002 regarding substitution of any fuel for transportation fuel being very expensive equivalent to $300 to $1000/bbl oil . Transportation uses about 70% of US oil. I would be interested in his analysis, but don't have access to it.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he last point is the Hotelling principle. The question is, even though the Hotelling principle seems not to matter, see for example Watkins (1992), it could matter if the cost of the next best backstop technology of oil is expensive. Solow (1974) in his famous speech said the backstop price should be not much more expensive than what oil already costs today. However, Reynolds shows convincing evidence that most alternatives to oil are much less useful than oil in a number of physical dimensions. If in fact oil has no great substitute—and for over one hundred years no substantial alternative has emerged as a transportation fuel even in our own high tech economy—then oil could reach a back stop price in the $300 to $1,000 per barrel range. If that is the case, Saudi Arabia and Russia are currently “giving away” their oil. That is, oil is currently undervalued. Soon Saudi Arabia and Russia will decide based on the Hotelling principle that they should wait to produce their oil, or at least not increase production, until prices indeed climb close to the long run value. But in order to conserve their oil, Russia and Saudi Arabia will have to reduce, or not increase, outputs. This will create a shock and push forward the peak oil date even further before the 50% cumulative production point. Therefore at any moment the peak in oil can occur.
Reynolds, Douglas B., (2002). Scarcity and Growth Considering Oil and Energy: An Alternative Neo-Classical View. Sole Author academic monograph, The Edwin Mellen Press, 240 pages.


An abstract is at:

www.hubbertpeak.com/reynolds/ScarcityGrowth.pdf
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby jaws » Sun 20 Nov 2005, 22:05:55

I don't disagree with that last quote, but when dealing with nationalized oil companies long-term value is irrelevant. Politics is what sets production, and politically for a country like Saudi Arabia it makes more sense to produce now instead of later.
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 13:41:19

One more thought on calculating the price of substitutions for oil, which brings me right back to my first post. It is almost impossible to calculate future fuel costs with any precision, because of the large number of variables, many of which are interrelated. The econometric model gets more and more branches with assumptions on every branch. Let one branch have flawed assumptions or input data and the conclusion is wrong.

K. Deffeyes' book " Beyond Oil" goes into most of the possible alternative substitutes for conventional oil- from coal to hydrogen. He covers it from a geological perspective, but the many failed commercial ventures he cites hint at the difficult economics.

To illustrate my point, play a mind game of what if a very large Multinational oil company decides to build an oil shale project to supply gasoline to the market at a rate of one million bbl/day. What will be the production cost of that gasoline when all the plants are built in 5 years?

After all the attempts of mining the shale by shovel and truck into retorts failed, the current approaches heat the shale in-situ with steam or electrical resistance heaters, and collect the heavy oil liquids. Steam use is blocked because all the available water rights are taken and you are fighting 7 States and Mexico for water. So you use electric heating. What price do you assume for electricity? Do you just use the current power rates in Utah with an adjustment for inflation? No, because if you are planning a million bbl/day production you must build your OWN power plants ( or contract for them). So you build a dedicated nuclear power plant (more needed later). You should consider using your own fuel oil to fire your electrical power plants. Just be sure your EROEI is modeled right.

Now you are getting heavy oil, that requires hydrogen in the refining process to make gasoline. Do you use prices for hydrogen from natural gas, which is the current refining process? Not unless you can project the availability and price of natural gas, and take into account all the costs of big LNG imports or build the Alaska natural gas pipeline. Or maybe you use your nuclear electricity to make hydrogen from water. Massive amounts of hydrogen will be needed to convert the long carbon chains in heavy oil into lighter gasoline. Much more electricity is now needed before you get the gasoline. The model needs to examine alternative hydrogen sources too. However, all this still depends on building more pipelines to get the product out of Utah, and building cities for all the workers. Maybe it is easier to bypass oil shale and go directly to electric powered trains and vehicles. Put those assumptions into the model. You also need to include all the costs to meet environmental requirements and permits, which involves knowing what pollutants will be generated, and what technology will be used to control them.

Perhaps someone could build a model of ALL the factors of production involved to get oil from shale. It is still filled with assumptions with a high probability you have overlooked something, have not adequately considered all the price feedbacks and you come up with wrong answers.
It is my observation that economists building econometric models do not adequately include all the engineering constraints imposed by physics and thermodynamics on their equations.

That is why people depending on these econometric models keep making flawed business decisions.

At one time in my career I was project manager funding our computer department to build a model. They kept bringing me the model, I kept pointing out flawed assumptions. They then said "fund us one more month and we will fix it!". It went on and on until I decided to cut my losses and canceled the idea.

Models can be very useful, as long as you appreciate the assumptions. The best ones work on boundary conditions, which perhaps is how Reynolds comes up with a range of $300 to $1000 /bbl for substitutes for conventional oil. Too many people are not satisfied with a factor of 3 error band, even when it is highly useful.

Would the CEO of the oil company in my oil shale project like an answer that his cost of gasoline from shale would be between $300 and $1000/ bbl? Maybe and then he cancels the project, unless the world oil price is heading to these prices too.

Instead, maybe some economist promoting the shale project brings him a model that gives numbers like $33 to $35 /bbl. It looks too good to be true and it is! Is the CEO smart enough to see that?
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby lorenzo » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 17:30:03

Myopia is indeed the key-word here.

This month's Le Monde Diplomatique features a brilliant but ultra-boring essay on the new accounting rules that are being created (US/EU-worldwide). I was shocked at what I read there. It shows how a small clique of technocrats wants to turn the entire world's population into one of shareholders buying into purely virtual companies whose share values don't have to reflect in any way any fundamentals of any kind.

http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2005/11/RICHARD/12911

The article sharply shows how accounting standards have changed over time, with norms growing increasingly towards "virtual accounting", with the aim of giving quick dividends to shareholders, based on almost fraudulent and gratuituous assessments of CEOs. The new rules are almost barbaric: they now allow the CEO to present an entirely ficticious book based on entirely ficticious projections about the potential future value of the shares.
All the real fundamentals of a company's health have been eliminated.

So, Donshan, you're describing basic fundamentals of real companies making real business decisions, but we're already waaaayyy beyond this. Today's companies make money in a purely virtual way, on their shares, no matter their fundamentals.

1. In the first phase of capitalism (1800-1860), companies had to include "potential losses" in their books and the cautionary principle of the lowest potential future market value of the shares; this kept shareholders cautious and companies with their feet on the ground.
> This way, it was impossible to issue dividends at the beginning phase of an investment; because all kinds of costs (R&D, etc...) were put in the books, brutally, at the beginning of the investment cycle; these costs had to be valorized, which takes time. So, investors knew that ROIs based on real fundamentals take time to come about.

2. In the second phase of capitalism (ca. 1900-2004), those who supported the shareholders revolted against this cautionary principle and after countless wars, they succeeded, throughout the 20th century, to include this cautionary principle as something that can be "amortized", "written off", put on the long track, eliminated as a post at the beginning of the investment cycle.
>This nasty little trick means that these costs are written off following a fixed procedure, not following the real "lowest potential market value". Amortizing thus creates a fiction, with which one can relegate the real costs which slow down the process by which a company makes profits, to a later date.
>Shareholders could now cash in very quickly on their investments; no need to wait years to get a real share of the real profits of a real company.
>This is what allowed pure speculative investments; because one could cash in at any time, step out at any time, get a dividend real quickly, without you having to take the burden of the real costs the company has made (because they are being magically amortized).

3. Today, in the final phase of capitalism, after Enron, WorldCom and countless other speculative bubbles, an international consortium of accountants was called to revise the rules. Now one would think they would get rid of the potential for such bubbles. But on the contrary, they created more conditions which make bubbles much more likely.
>This final phase of capitalism (2004-...) invents a really brilliant nasty idea: costs are no longer amortized, you don't even have to write them in your books as fundamentals, amortization has been declared dead; instead comes: the freedom of the CEO squad to write "maximum potential future market values" of the shares, and use them as the basis for estimations about potential profits. The world turned upside down!
>No need any longer to have a company that produces real stuff; you can just create a company, tell the world that you "expect" a 200% increase of your share value over the coming year, you don't have to prove anything on paper (which used to be the case in phase I and II); just go out and say something. Wear a tie!
>This is the perfect recipee for more bubbles and crashes; people will invest, expect a fast dividend and cash, tomorrow, and pull out if lucky or lose everything if gambling badly.

So we have moved towards a purely virtual business culture of fantasy expectations and fantasy "facts" taken as fundamentals.

Now, personally, I don't give a damn, because I'm not that much of a shareholder, but now comes the dirty part: governments themselves are using my tax-money, to invest in such a fantasy world. If they crash, I lose all my money, without having had any say in it and without having any way of recovering it. (Tax money is my money; my productive labor is part income, part tax; I am free to decide what I do with my income, but the State manages its income, which is my money too.)
Banks do the same thing. So I can't even invest my own income into something more stable and durable (I can, but the Bank *itself* which allows me to do so, finds its entire financial base in the fantasy investments; so if my Bank crashes, my cautious non-stock investments are gone too.)

This is what upsets the author of the essay most; if it were up to him, the entire world's elite should be free to gamble, whether on the stock market or in Las Vegas. But when it comes to public goods and public money (which is still my money too), it should be managed more cautiously, preferrably with the 19th century cautionary accounting principle in mind.

So there we have it. A grand history going from companies having to take into account the "potential lowest future market value of the shares" and writing real costs in their books brutally at the beginning of an investment cycle --- all the way to companies hiding all the real costs of their assets, which have been excluded as important accounting parametres, and which have been replaced by the authority of CEO-teams whose only real obligation is to issue statements about "potential maximum future value of the shares", without these statements having to have any factual basis.

Disastrous!



English version of the article: does not exist! Le Monde Diplomatique uses the word "Anglosaxon" all the time, so they select the articles which they will translate to show them to an Anglosaxon public, very carefully. This one, they didn't select, because the article is extremely harsh on the Anglosaxons. The new accounting standards are Anglosaxon in nature, and there's a serious debate and rage about it, here in Europe.

You can get it if you subscribe, here: http://mondediplo.com/

Here's the free French version:
http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2005/11/RICHARD/12911
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby donshan » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 18:01:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('lorenzo', 'M')yopia is indeed the key-word here.

So, Donshan, you're describing basic fundamentals of real companies making real business decisions, but we're already waaaayyy beyond this. Today's companies make money in a purely virtual way, on their shares, no matter their fundamentals.



You are right, they are surely trying! Enron, Worldcom et.al were the prototype models of making money by smoke and mirrors. we only know about them, because they got caught. How many more "Enrons" are there that are smarter now and getting away with it?

Today I see on the newswires, a rumor that the Big oil companies, flush with huge profits, are shopping to buy out each other, since buying oil/gas reserves is a better use of cash than actually hunting for more in the real world. With the ability to file their financial reports showing "increased reserves this year vs. previous year" it looks like they are having a fantastic exploration success replacing reserves faster than they are being used. All that has to happen to complete the illusion is to eliminate or hide the footnotes. Share prices could then rise on the improved reserves.

Virtual reality is everywhere else, why not economics? Just another example of a flawed system :)
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Re: Is Modern Economic Theory Flawed?

Unread postby Jake_old » Mon 21 Nov 2005, 18:12:20

Eloquently put lorenzo. The difference between stage 2 and 3 doesn't seem like a milestone to me.

We have a situation here when a company is in the process of trying to move to the FTSE from a lower division as it were, the chairman actually just states the value of the shares. Just like you said here.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', ' ')the freedom of the CEO squad to write "maximum potential future market values" of the shares, and use them as the basis for estimations about potential profits


But this has been happening for quite some time, perhaps this just makes it easier, although I don't see how, it still only means filling in pieces of paper.
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Is The Economy A Lot Stronger Than You Think ?

Unread postby Vexed » Sun 12 Feb 2006, 18:39:36

Interesting take (propaganda?) on why government numbers are actually much better than they appear.

Why the Economy is a lot stronger than you think

The discussion of a Knowledge Economy made me think of all the overblown hype about the rise of a New Economy during the dot-com bubble.

But I thought the following quote was worth considering:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'G')lobalization, outsourcing, and the emphasis on innovation and creativity are forcing businesses to shift at a dramatic rate from tangible to intangible investments.
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Re: Why The Economy Is A Lot Stronger Than You Think

Unread postby rogerhb » Sun 12 Feb 2006, 18:47:14

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Vexed', 'W')hy The Economy Is A Lot Stronger Than You Think


It's called PPT
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Re: Why The Economy Is A Lot Stronger Than You Think

Unread postby Ludi » Sun 12 Feb 2006, 18:59:26

"intangible investments" = "hot air."

We been down this here road before, I do believe....
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Re: Why The Economy Is A Lot Stronger Than You Think

Unread postby Jellric » Sun 12 Feb 2006, 19:35:52

Famous last words.

"This time it's different."
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