Amusingly,
I vote 1907 as the year of peak economic growth, for the United States.
Because that was the year of peak "production of energy". At that time 7% growth per year was considered good, where as after that time the energy extraction growth rate cooled to 2% per year. Dr. Hubbert can explain this more eloquently...
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Figure 17 Is a graph plotted on a semilogarithmic scale of the production of energy from coal, oil, gas, and water power and a small amount of nuclear power from 1850 to 1969. From 1850 to 1907 the production of energy increased exponentially at a rate of 6.91 percent per year, with a doubling period of 10.0 years. Then during the three-year period from 1907 to 1910, the growth rate dropped abruptly to a mean rate of 1.77 percent per year and the doubling period increased to 39 years.
Dr. HUBBERT. I am principally saying -- in the first place that the break of 1910 is, I think, a major event in American history, and we didn't even know it happened. We have been coasting along under the illusion that we had far more growth since 1910 than we had actually had. If you want to go back to the decade of the 1920's, that was regarded during the time as a period of a great boom. Well, actually industrially, although the industrial production in 1929 was the highest up until that date,
it was still about 30 percent less than where it would have been if that break hadn't occurred in 1910.So that the decade of the 1920's was a boom period on paper, not industrially. Industrially it was a slowing down period.
National Energy Conservation Policy Act of 1974, Hearings before the Subcommittee on the Environment of the committee on Interior and Insular Affairs House of Representatives. June 6, 1974.
http://www.energybulletin.net/3845.html
Not sure, but probably much earlier then this year. Peak energy production for the US was masked by inflation, but because of it, from the point of view of
If peak world energy production growth was around the 1980's and the markets respond as they did after 1910-1930 in the US, perhaps a world economic depression should follow soon?
Loads of conjecture, but it may be a fair comparison of past to present. What do people think?