by Heineken » Thu 20 Mar 2008, 14:47:46
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BigTex', 'I') buy the short term trouble thesis.
I also believe we are experiencing the first post-PO recession.
It will be really interesting to see what the economy looks like on the other side of this recession.
I'm sure that we will emerge from this recession with better economic growth than we are seeing now, plus more optimism, since I think optimism is cyclical whether the fundamentals are good or bad.
However, I think that people are going to begin to notice that the post-recession economic growth will not be as robust, and won't last as long before the economy begins to sputter again.
That's the economic effect of PO, right? No more cheap energy, no more easy growth. No more demand destruction that drives energy prices into the floor during the downturns either.
I'm still trying to figure out how the debt and credit trouble fit into everything.
Maybe it's a little bit like driving a V-8 engine on only six cylinders. You aren't getting the performance that the engine design suggests because you aren't able to utilize all of the engine's potential. You would like to get the engine fixed, but you don't have any money. Meanwhile, you also stopped making payments on the thing several months ago, so there is a repo man chasing you around, and the inability to use all eight cylinders may make it so that you can't go fast enough to outrun him.
The V-8 = Industrial Civilization
Missing Two Cylinders = High Energy Prices
Can't Fix the Motor = Peak Oil
Stopped Making Payments = Sub-Prime, Consumer Debt, Government Debt
Repo Man = Total Economic Collapse
Tex, you're viewing the situation only in economic terms.
You don't seem to be giving sufficient weight to environmental factors. They will dwarf the economic problems (but are of course interrelated with them).