by Observerbrb » Tue 30 Dec 2014, 14:59:35
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Nonsense. The price needs to go up long enough for people to feel the bite of scarcity before they reduce their spending. The sticker-shock comes first, THEN the economic downturn. That's what happened when we had our biggest oil-shocks back in the 70s.
Gee, I thought it had something to do with real-estate and collateral-debt-obligations. Ever heard of that angle?
The Price went up, and people reduced their spending.

The economists’ view misses the fact that it is external energy that makes the economy operate the way it does. (...)If energy products are higher priced, energy importers can afford less of them, and there is a tendency of their economies to shrink back to what their economies can afford—fewer employed workers and fewer government programs.Why is demand not increasing again? The Price will reach its equilibrium again for some time (months) after destroying some supply, but the trend is clear: Oil will cost less and less as time passes by, because we could afford to consume less and less.
And now I have some questions for everyone who thinks that the ETP model is not describing accurately the short-term reality (I would like to read shortonoil comments on the issue, since he proposed it and could defend it much better than me):
Would you invest in artic oil? Who is going to pay for a 100 USD barrel of oil (and its products)? Why do you think that investing in artic oil will be profitable one day again (in the next 10 or 20 years) if less net energy is entering the economy?
Why do you think that oil costing 52 USD is the consequence of a healthy economy when the fact that the global oil breakeven Price is 50 USD (Source:
http://makewealthhistory.org/2014/12/16 ... producers/ )? This means that approximately 50% of the oil market is not profitable to extract, refine and distribute. Do you think that this is a good signal and that there is a new era of cheap oil around the corner that will boost the economic growth? Don't you think that this will exacerbate massive deflationary pressures and this will start to broke a heavily indebted system as debts will never be repaid, with bankrupts cascading through the whole economy?
PS. Thanks to everyone for their answers and comments, i really enjoy having a meaningful exchange of arguments here.