by Doly » Wed 13 Feb 2008, 11:27:58
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'B')ut I really, truly, sincerely doubt that $1500 or $2000 a year (or $500 difference) in gasoline prices is what has caused this recession to occur! ; - )
Looking at it like that, it doesn't look like much. But there are other factors. For example, you have higher food prices, driven not only by bad weather, but also by higher transport and energy costs. If you added up the total increase in bills due to higher oil and gas prices, it starts to look significant.
Admittedly, the problem wouldn't be half as bad if the Americans' savings weren't so low that anything would trip them. But then, you could ask: How did this happen?
You can say it happened because the average American is greedy and stupid. Or you can take the point of view that it happened because the average American dreams to have their own home, and there were a bunch of lenders very happy to convince them that what looked like crazy mortgages were in fact, very reasonable, and a lot of people were buying houses at inflated prices with mortgages they shouldn't have taken in the first place.
Then, you can ask: But how did the housing bubble happen? As we all know, it was a consequence of some stupidly low interest rates, plus some very creative financial ideas that allowed the bubble to grow well beyond the point any other bubble would have busted.
And why did the Fed lower interest rates so much? There are many opinions about the recession the Fed was trying to avert, the most common being it was the dot com bubble. But you can also think the global imbalances played an important part. The trade deficit is supposed not to be recessionary in an environment of floating currencies, but I wonder how you can honestly say that the dollar 'floats' when so many countries were pegging themselves to the dollar, including most oil exporters.
Oil imports were a big part of the trade deficit, and I think there is a good argument that it's part of the reason the American economy has been in such a strange shape since the turn of the century. And high oil prices are definitely the thing that is going to turn this recession into something very, very nasty.
In my opinion, you can say oil dependency planted some of the seeds of this recession, and peak oil triggered it.