Simple statement, believable enough, but it absolutely must be WRONG. Right? After all, if the production costs of crude oil are invariably going up as extraction and quality rates are spiraling downward, the money can't simply be "disappearing into the hole," as one would say. Yet, the added costs of extraction, along with the aggravation of the supply/demand constraint, are assumed to commence wreaking havoc on the economy. But why is that? Is the added cost of production and the market premium not also making its way into the larger economy, thereby negating the overall increase in cost? Unless I am to believe that the added cost is going directly into the coffers at XOM, never to be reinvested in capital projects or, indeed, the greater economy, ever again, then why should we worry how much oil (or anything, for that matter) costs? After all, the money is not simply disappearing, right?
Anyways, I'm probably having an out-of-body moment Bernanke moment right now - "inflation's good."
Please, someone apprise me of what can only be considered a fundamental misunderstanding of economics, because that is what I am suffering from right now.







