by DantesPeak » Sat 28 Jun 2008, 09:24:18
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('memmel', 'F')or once I think they are being a bit melodramatic. I can see bankers being unhappy but this is only another 60 dollar increase on our current prices and about and additional dollar on a gallon of gas.
I'd guess this would result in at most a 5% contraction in the worlds economy not including growth if you included growth slowing down first then 200 dollar oil would introduce a mild and patchy recession.
I think 300 will send us closer to a global recession but we won't hit one until oil is at 500 a barrel. But then it should pretty much go strait into a depression.
At basically 140 a barrel we still have housing in the US insanely priced with a slow housing collapse underway. At the rate its moving its 2010 or so before prices even return to pre-bubble levels in most areas.
Pretty much the same for the rest of the overheated economy. Unemployment is just now picking up steam. No way 200 a barrel is going to dramatically change this. Overall people still have plenty of room to absorb higher fuel prices. Many countries still have significant subsidies. And the US economic stimulation thing was really a gasoline subsidy in disguise for those smart enough to use it correctly. I suspect we will get a similar handout next year that more people will devout to gasoline.
Expansion esp building etc that most banks depend on will drop sharply so a depression in finance will probably happen but this is a banking problem not a overall economic problem.
I do agree that the combination of 200 oil and the recent and ongoing banking fiasco will probably cause serious problems for the profitability of the banking sector and this will work to stop growth but the end of growth is not the end of the world economy. Even the first few years of shrinking is not going to be a huge problem.
Its when we hit the 300-500 range that real problems start cropping up.
You've done great forecasting the price of oil - when do you see $300 oil coming?
Despite some news headlines, such as China and India reducing energy subsidies, the underlying trend is for more government intervention on a relative scale. In the US, a combination of rebates, tax cuts, or direct energy subsidies will be put into place to soften the blow of high energy prices. I look for a second round of government action (the first being rebates) to be put into place even before this year's election.
That's because we are heading for a significant recession rather soon. The world economy will only collapse when (1) existing infrastructure built on cheap oil wears out or becomes useless and/or (2) the price of oil gets to be somewhere about $300 in inflation adjusted June 2008 dollars.
However I believe the inflationary forces unleashed by governments around the world will accelerate monetary inflation (as opposed to resource price inflation) and we may not see an economic collapse - which I define as a drop of 10% in economic activity from peak - until oil gets about $500.
It's already over, now it's just a matter of adjusting.