by jlw61 » Sun 20 Apr 2008, 18:26:14
While I believe that the market can sort it out best, I also believe some form of rationing will be the end result. I also just realized that with rationing, there is usually a whole new level of bureaucracy. You will need inspectors to watch for a black market, questionable purchases, and forged ration cards/coupons. You'll need a whole lot more people running around trying to stop the black market. Government will grow, demand more in taxes (probably at the pump) and the price will spiral even higher. The sanest, most reasonable method to all this is letting the market run its course.
However, I'm one who believes that government will not be able to "do nothing" and some form of rationing will occur. After all, why should the "poor" have to use mass transit? Why should the poor live near their work? Why should the poor have to get rid of their one-ton pickups, SUVs, and 15-year old V8 engines? Just because many of the middle class are paying more, switching to more efficient vehicles, car pooling, taking the bus, moving closer to work, cutting traveling and doing with less doesn't mean the poor should suffer. After all, as most socialist seem to believe, if there are hardships then the middle class need to do with less (or just work harder to have an iota of their former life). I love how socialist tend to think that everyone else (not them of course) need to lower their standard of living and "share the pain".
Some possible scenarios for rationing:
Worst: The government does what it usually does and starts a rationing system. Lots of new inspectors, rationing cards, and laws. These new inspectors could then double, in the future, as anti-hording inspectors who would be able to enter your house without warrant and look for food caches. Government gets bigger, taxes go up, inflation soars, a new class of criminal is created, prisons expand and it's all being done for "the children." Within two years the system becomes bloated and completely corrupt. We all have fun as we circle the drain even faster.
Better: A card that you can refill at ATMs or the gas station that allows the holder to put X number of gallons/week at a much lower price. The card would probably a maximum of 4 weeks worth of gas and the banks would get to charge a buck every time you filled it. Once you use your weeks ration, you pay the much higher market price (with much higher gas taxes). This is actually, IMHO, the smartest way to ration as it provides a profit motive for banks and industry to support it and creates a rationing system that minimizes government growth and could help minimize the black market.
Best: You designate one of your credit/ATM cards as the "gas card" that allows you to do as above, thus giving you a little better security, no new card to carry, and it performs the same task and banks don't get anything extra for the trouble. Those without ATM or credit cards use a prepaid debit card.
In the better and best category it would be possible to handle all of this if a gas station accepts credit cards at the pump (believe it or not, I found one that did not last fall). Yes, it would require some extra work on the part of the industry to reprogram their machines, but as a programmer I can not see it as a hardship if given enough notice.
Last edited by
jlw61 on Sun 20 Apr 2008, 18:34:45, edited 1 time in total.
When somebody makes a statement you don't understand, don't tell him he's crazy. Ask him what he means. -- Otto Harkaman, Space Viking