Page added on June 5, 2007
Saudi Arabia is running the U.S. economy.
I’m not sure the Saudis want the task, but they’ve got it. Because the United States still doesn’t have a national energy policy, we’ve thrown decisions about how fast our economy grows and whether our standard of living rises or falls into the hands of Saudi Arabia’s oil ministry.
That’s risky, since the economic self-interest of Saudi Arabia and the United States aren’t always aligned, and because keeping the fractious and often dysfunctional governments of the world’s oil producers on the same economic course is a whole lot harder than building consensus among the governors of the Federal Reserve.
Fed ain’t what it used to be
Remember the good ol’ days? Back when the U.S. Federal Reserve and its chairman were in charge of our economy? The Fed would try to find a delicate balance in setting interest rates: High enough to control inflation and low enough to encourage economic growth. Once upon a time, those policy changes were actually the most important decisions anyone made about the U.S. economy.
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