by Jack » Sat 10 Nov 2007, 21:33:55
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pstarr', 'U')ntil the United States confronts its own 'Peak Military', it will continue to 'off shore' its pain, economic or otherwise, around the world. Zimbabwe and other 3rd-world economies seem to shrinking. Cleveland and Detroit's economies are shrinking. So I guess the proper question would be, 'are the economies of Non-Suburban Dreamlands shrinking?'
Hmm. Maybe.
Let's suppose that Suburban Dreamlands are half the economy, and Non-Suburban Dreamlands are the other half.
Suburban Dreamlands grow by 1% net of inflation. Non-Suburban Dreamlands shrink by 2% net of inflation.
In this model, the economy shrank by 1%.
But...and this is the key point...if crude oil availability shrank by, say, 2%, the net shrinkage is the number of interest. And it would imply a rate of:
1% / 2 % or about 0.5
Now...here's where it gets interesting.
Suppose oil depletes at 2% per year.
That would imply (if we use the very simple model above) that GDP will decline by 1% every year. If we want to keep one sector going, we must cannibalize another sector even more.
But ... notice ... the pie is shrinking.
That's a key peak oil prediction. It is a new phenomenon. I contend it is happening now.