by threadbear » Tue 18 Mar 2008, 00:54:19
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('smallpoxgirl', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('threadbear', 'T')he structured investment instruments and over the counter derivative schemes began when oil was under 30.00 per barrel. It's tempting to view this problem through the macro lens of oil depletion, but it would have happened anyway. The run up in oil price has been welcomed politically, because much of it ends up right back in the banks of developed nations, where it's funneled into more derivative schemes.
You don't think it ties into the whole societal gestalt? Pay day loans, credit cards, ARM's, reverse mortgages, 7 year car loans, rent-to-own furniture, run away national debt. Maybe you're right, but it sure seems to me the over riding theme is that through the 50's and 60's, our energy supply and thus our economy were expanding. We got into that expansion fever, and when it wasn't really happening anymore, we made believe through debt.
According to this:
link, modern derivatives trading began in 1972, two years after the US peak. And equity derivatives, the problem we're really talking about here I think, began in the late 80's.
I think they're related...just not in the way many think. Cheap oil definitely helped feed the illusion that natural resources are infinite. The fantasy of plenty operated on many different levels. The middle class believed, up until recently, that their wages would somehow grow tremendously in the next couple of decades, or everything would just somehow work out, despite evidence to the contrary, so they took on waaaaayyyyy too much debt. This dynamic was firmly in place when oil was less than $30. a barrel, but unions were no longer a vitalizing economic forcel
Every pothole in their job and career landscape has been viewed, by the middle class as potentially ruining their rims, but not ending in a yawning chasm that could swallow them whole, so they kept on buying and buying and getting further into debt.
Rising gasoline prices could be the straw that breaks the camel's back, granted, but irrespective of oil prices, we'd still have a major problem. Most people are just too vulnerable to dreams of affluence. The parasites that run this planet can't resist people who can't resist the dream.
If we do have a depression it could be permanent, for all the reasons you describe. If prices of commodities remain high, and they well could, our standard of living will drop significantly.