by MrBill » Fri 27 Jul 2007, 03:38:30
You seem to want to fight a battle based on ideology, in which case you have come to the wrong place. That battle has already been fought and the free-market won over the centrally planned economy.
No communist country exists anymore that has not accepted the free-market economy, simply because it is superior at allocating goods & services more efficiently. The free-market economy is so superior that it has delivered the highest living standards for the greatest number of people in the history of the world. The only reason we can afford to consume non-essential items is because the free-market has already taken care of all of our basic needs.
There really would not be much to talk about if we were not faced with post peak oil resource depletion. And that is what I am interested to talk about. Please spare me the lectures on the evils of capitalism or consumption.
The source of consumption is of course an expanding population. No matter how frugally you live, or force others to live, you cannot have negative consumption. Every person who is alive consumes everyday until they die. It is not ideology. It is a fact!
Also, do not confuse labor and know-how or intangible assets with energy. They are not the same. Yes, you can substitute some for one or the other, but the value of your Casio or your Rolex does not come down to the difference in energy consumption, but due to craftsmanship which is labor combined with knowledge. Craftsmen have been producing intricate works of art and mechanical precision long before the internal combustion engine was developed. In fact without their collective skills it would not have been possible in the first place.
If you want to sit there and tell me that we need land to grow crops. That we need food to go to work. The we need energy to move products from A to B. And that without energy none of that would be possible. It is like, no shit, Dick Tracey!
But petroleum is not the only source of energy. It is an important part of our current energy mix needed to run this economy. The transition to another economy using either less energy or another energy mix or both will mean lower living standards. Not more debt. Excess unemployed labor will not be able to borrow to keep consuming in an environment of lower living standards and higher real prices for all basic necessities stemming from less energy and the remaining energy that is more expensive. But neither are they likely just to starve to death. That would be too convenient for the rest of us.
If you have less energy and more surplus labor you substitute labor for energy. Look at the developing world. In parts of sub-Sahara Africa they are farming using Stone Age technology. Not because they are unaware that other technology exists, but because they lack access to that technology.
The future will contain communities of production clustered around sources of reliable, renewable energy like hydro, nuclear, solar, bio-mass, geo-thermal, etc. The farther you get away from those sources of energy the more backward will outlying societies be and will have to rely on more draught power and more human effort.
Stationary sources of power, like coal while it lasts, will power rail. We built railways around the world in Colonial times and they can be built again. The only reason they have gone out of fashion is because of the automobile. That and the fact that uneducated criminals and tinpot dictators in their infinte wisdom decided to tear up the tracks to use the rails and ties for other purposes!
Once the age of the automobile is gone we will revert to what is tried and tested. The same for ships, boats and barges. They can be made to run on almost anything and they carry more freight with less energy than trucks. Manufactured goods will be delivered to central warehouses located on rail or water and then distributed by foot, by horse and cart and by any other means. Again, you have to look at the developing world.
Will this new age suck compared to what we are used to? Of course! But what is unsustainable is be definition going to end sooner rather than later. Once the marginal cost of exploring, drilling, extracting, transporting, refining and distributing petroleum exceeds the marginal economic benefit of using petroleum then the age of petroleum will be over.
In other words when the EROEI is less than 1:1. Then we will move onto the next available alternative no matter how imperfect a substitute it is. There will be no other choice. We can hope that some future technology will mitigate that painful transition to a new equilibrium, but we cannot count on it.
And with 10 billion people I really do not have a philosophical problem with poverty. The free-market has already lifted hundreds of millions of the poor out of poverty. That they want to jump back into bed and reproduce like rats is hard to stop. If the world population would have stabilized at 3 billion then we probably would have no poverty in the world today. But it did not, so we have 6.7 billion, 700 million added in the past 7-years alone. 700 million is larger than the population of the EU and USA combined. Plus many of those 700 million, along with billions of others, were born in places that cannot support them in environmental terms or any other terms.
Did I decide they should be born? No. I would not have made that mistake. Now you tell me that I have to bridge the information divide, provide food, clothing and shelter, and give every child a laptop? Give me a break! If we have not solved those social problems in the age of plenty then we are not going to solve them on the backside of post peak oil resource depletion, and as you point out falling GDP.
We had our chance and we blew it! Now some of us will salvage what we can. Is it fair? Did anyone say it would be?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.