In my first post on this site 2 ½ years ago, I saw a decline scenario that no one seemed to have broached as yet. I called it the Peak Oil Perfect Storm. That original thread can be viewed here:
The Peak Oil Perfect Storm
I made several updates over the years, but now I think it is time to present The Peak Oil Perfect Storm II and allow our newer members to voice their views. While “peak oil” in of itself seems to be a harbinger of disaster, there are many other factors at play that I feel will exacerbate our ability to forestall a hard-landing. Here is an update on some of the things I see, with a few additions from the original:
First: With the lowest interest rates in 40 years, huge war and domestic deficit spending, and a huge tax cut, we are still having a great difficulty finding any
real economic growth pre-peak. Much of our economic growth has not been as a result of a growth in real income and wages, nor in the production of real goods and services. It has been financial speculation. 40 % of GDP growth by some estimates. Much of the recent run-up in household debt has been mortgage-related; low interest rates have spurred a refinancing boom that has allowed consumers to extract equity from their homes to pay for a variety of goods and services. Borrowing against home equity is generating billions in spendable cash fueling our GDP growth. The refi-ATM.
Second: In 2001, a study by then Secretary of the Treasury, Paul O’Neill, projected future “entitlement” expenditures (Social Security, Medicare, Veterans benefits, government retirement, etc) would exceed revenues by $44 trillion dollars. It estimates that closing the gap would require the equivalent of an immediate and permanent 69 percent across-the-board income tax increase, or a 45 percent cut in Social Security and Medicare. If policymakers continue on their current course with Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, the nation will be forced to choose among devastating tax increases, the elimination of nearly every other federal program, and budget deficits large enough to jeopardize the entire U.S. economy.
Seventy-eight million baby-boomers are going to start retiring at 62 next year, the first year they will be eligible to collect Social Security. As they do, the number of retirees in America will double. At the same time the workforce supporting them will grow by a mere 15%. Solving this problem will hurt like hell.
Third: People no longer have any rebound ability. The Commerce Department reported recently that the savings rate for all of 2006 was a negative 1 percent, meaning that not only did people spend all the money they earned but they also dipped into savings or increased borrowing to finance purchases. The 2006 figure was lower than a negative 0.4 percent in 2005 and was the poorest showing since a negative 1.5 percent savings rate in 1933 during the Great Depression. (2004 savings rate = positive 1.7%)
In coming decades, a growing fraction of U.S. workers will pass their peak earning years and approach retirement. In preparation, workers should be building their nest eggs and paying down debt. Instead, many of today's workers are saving almost nothing and taking on large amounts of adjustable-rate debt with payments programmed to rise with the level of interest rates.
Interest rates: 5.25%, the 17th consecutive quarter-percentage-point increase since June 2004 with projections of 5.5% by April 2007. (Interest rates June 2004 = 1.0%)
Increases in stock market and residential property wealth have substituted for putting aside money each month from their paychecks. As the US baby boomers retire, they will further depress the savings rate as they draw down their savings in an effort to make up the difference between the salaries they earned on the job and their smaller Social Security payments.
However, as long as the government can print money faster than you can save it, you can’t get ahead…as inflation gobbles up any gain. Nevertheless, we need an increase in domestic savings to help correct our huge Current Account Deficit (CAD).
http://www.economagic.com/em-cgi/data.e ... /psavert+2
2006 Personal Savings Drop to 74-Yr. Low
http://apnews.myway.com/article/20070201/D8N0V3C00.html
Fourth: The 2005 trade deficit equaled 5.8 percent of this country's gross domestic product. In 2006, the deficit was equal to 7 percent of GDP, up from 6.8 percent of gross domestic product in the third quarter. (2004 = 5.1% of GDP)
This resulted in a $850 billion dollar trade deficit for 2006.
The only way that the US economy can improve its current account balance is if it exports more but doesn’t spend or borrow more, or starts saving, both public and private. There’s absolutely no other way.
Fifth: Water shortages. We are experiencing record droughts in many areas, especially the West. Although Lake Powell has seen some improvement, it is still 100.57 feet below Full Pool,and only 48.09% of capacity. Snow-pack is 75% of average. 34% through water year 2007, water storage has fallen by 221,068 AF and total outflows have exceeded total inflows by 431,416 AF.
http://lakepowell.water-data.com/
Also, by decree of the Colorado River Compact of 1922, they must release 8.5 MAF each year for the states of CA, AZ, NV, and the treaty agreements with Mexico. The entire economy of the West is tied to this water. And to compound matters, the historical flows have never exceeded 7.5 MAF since the pact was signed in 1922.
Australia? Best of luck down there, mates!
Driest year on record in parts of southern Australia
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t was the driest year on record (back to 1900) across parts of the south, most notably in northern and parts of eastern Tasmania, northeast Victoria and adjacent parts of southern NSW and the ACT.
Sixth: Infrastructure. $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Montequest', 'I') tend to look at our limitations to bear the brunt of this storm. We know that whatever we do, it will require trillions of dollars of investment in infrastructure. Money that we don't have unless we "print it" causing hyperinflation.
Building new nuclear plants, transmission lines (more important than the plants, I'll have you know), ramping up coal production, hydrogen facilities, LNG tankers, etc. Massive new infrastructure.
No problem, you say? Well, let's have a look at our "current" infrastructure, shall we? After all, this is America, the "can do" place. We have built the best shit anywhere, right? So, let's see how we are doing, because if we are not doing well, we don't have a snowballs chance in hell in building the required infrastructure to deal with peak oil.