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Adding greatly to our foundation-shaking, angst-ridden
and white-knuckled concerns in daily life is how to afford enough gas to do
what's necessary to keep the ball rolling, day by day -- kids to school ... us
to work ... groceries [fewer bags for larger cost] secured at the one-stop
shopping event that's being combined with other essential trips so no gas
frittering occurs.
I would like to take a moment to say that although a
prophet is never honored in his own country, JIMMY CARTER told us this day would
come, and tried to make us pay attention to the eventualities. But
noooooooo -- we did our little Scarlett O'Hara "fiddle-de-dee,"
flipped our dress up behind us as we moved along and continued to guzzle; like
the spoiled Miss S, we decided to worry about it "tomorrow."
So,
tomorrow is here -- how do you like it so far?
I'm always perplexed [but
in sorrowful agreement] when Bill Maher discusses gas prices -- as someone
whines about them, Bill invariably adds, "Good. Maybe now we'll begin to take
this seriously." Elective surgery is what you put off when you can -- when it's
no longer elective, it's a bona fide emergency. Alternative power sources are no
longer elective -- and when Bill reminds us of that, I always think about Poppy
Bush and his declaration that the American life-style would NOT be thwarted.
Except by reality, perhaps.
Our Boy Wonder thinks that ANWR holds
the answer and is pounding on "tree huggers" for holding up his drilling project
-- the fact that the oil wouldn't be available in this decade or even until well
into the next doesn't deflate his bubble -- a bright, sparkly and profitable one
he shares with Exxon Mobil who is 'disappointed' in their $10.9 billion profit
this quarter.
Oh, fiddle-de-dee!
A boycott of Exxon [as Boss Hog of the oil
profiteer's] was proposed awhile back and I think that's an excellent idea --
although in the final analysis, most of us will end up purchasing fuel for the
lowest price wherever we can find it. All those energy saving plans Jimmy said
would be expedient for our future were scrapped long ago and under the Dubby's
tenure, given the heave-ho ... so we're locked in to this moment in time, and
forced to think longingly about alternatives at long last ... I just hope we get
over the ethanol propaganda quickly enough to divert money away from it and get
corn back onto the table where it belongs [Obama needs to come up to speed on
this, I don't know about Clinton.]
McCain and
Clinton like the psychological benefits of a summer decrease in this election
season; Obama is playing Carter on this one, poking the illusions with a stick, and supported by most of the analyst's.
I think we need to get on the same page and realize our guzzling days are pretty much
done -- the dinosaurs are dead, and their last dregs are being fought over by
another species in deep trouble; time to get on with the
inevitable.
Sales of trucks and SUV's are down by over 10% and likely to
continue to drop -- and commuters are selecting trains and buses now more than
ever, although there are concerns with that long-ignored infrastructure as
well. While
we moan and sigh, it is well to remember that gas is over $8 in the UK and ; we've been Scarlett for a long long time -- it's time to stop
fiddling and pay the piper. The last article will make you
gasp.
By
the way, as regards news of the day -- it's the 5th anniversary
of "Mission Accomplished" ... we're shooting missile's at Somalia ... 80,000 more jobs went down the drain in April ... and the recently convicted DC Madam has
evidently committed suicide in
Florida.
[Obama
ad running in Illinois and North Carolina -- open link for video]
I'm
here to tell you the truth. We could suspend the gas tax for 6 months, but
that's not going to bring down gas prices long-term. You're gonna save about 25,
30 dollars…or half a tank of gas. That's typical of how Washington works.
There's a problem, everybody's upset about gas prices – let's find some
short-term, quick-fix, that we can say we did something even though, even though
we're not really doing anything.
We cannot deliver on a better energy
policy unless we change how business is done in Washington We've got to to the
oil companies and look at their price-gouging. We've got to start using less oil
and that means raising fuel efficiency standards on cars and developing
alternative fuels.
That's the real honest answer to how we're going to
solve this problem. That's what you need from a president, someone who's going
to tell you the truth.
A
growing chorus -- including a top congressional Democrat -- labeled Sen. Hillary
Rodham Clinton's proposal for suspending the federal gasoline tax ineffective
and shortsighted yesterday, even as she continued to paint Sen. Barack Obama as
insensitive to drivers' woes for not endorsing the plan.
The Democrats'
clash on the issue has emerged as a flash point in the week before the
presidential primaries in Indiana and North Carolina and is emblematic of the
broader contrast that the candidates have presented: Clinton says she would make
immediate bread-and-butter fixes for struggling Americans, while Obama portrays
himself as a truth-teller who would bring a new kind of politics to Washington
and produce more lasting change.
Backing up Obama's position against
Clinton's proposal to suspend the 18.4-cent-per-gallon tax for the summer is a
slew of economists who argue that the proposal, first offered by Sen. John
McCain, the presumptive GOP nominee, would be counterproductive. They argue that
cutting the tax would drive up demand for gas at a time when the supply is
tight, which would mean that the price at the pump would drop by much less than
18 cents per gallon.
The tax suspension would, as a result, cut into the
highway trust fund that the tax supports, a loss of about $9 billion over the
summer, but also result in fatter profit margins for oil companies. Clinton says
she would replace the lost revenue by raising taxes on the oil
industry.
Harvard professor N. Gregory Mankiw, who has written a
best-selling textbook on economics, said what he teaches is different from what
Clinton and McCain are saying about gas taxes. "What you learn in Economics 101
is that if producers can't produce much more, when you cut the tax on that good
the tax is kept . . . by the suppliers and is not passed on to consumers," he
said.
Clinton has an ad running in North Carolina and Indiana that
attacks Obama for his opposition to lifting the tax. Yesterday, she added
visuals to her pitch by joining a sheet-metal worker on his ride to work,
stopping with him at a gas station to fill up the pickup truck he was driving as
her motorcade's SUVs idled nearby.
"I'm willing to give you a little more
relief on a short-term basis," Clinton said. In Apex, N.C., her husband chimed
in by telling voters, according to ABC News:
"There's a difference
between the two candidates here. Her opponent says, 'Well, she's just pandering
to voters.' That's not true. Look, folks, there are people out here who are
choosing every week now between driving to work and having enough food for their
kids, between driving to work and paying their medicine
bills."
Obama, who as a state senator supported temporarily
suspending the Illinois gas tax in 2000, cast Clinton's proposal as a ploy that
would, according to an estimate by the Congressional Budget Office, save the
average family about $30 for the summer -- or, he said yesterday, "30 cents a
day, which is less than you can buy a cup of coffee for at 7-Eleven." He began
running a 60-second ad showing a clip of him responding to what he calls the
"Clinton-McCain proposal" at a rally.
"That's typical of how Washington
works. There's a problem, everybody's upset about gas prices -- let's find some
short-term quick fix, that we can say we did something even though we're not
really doing anything," he says in the ad. "We cannot deliver on a better energy
policy unless we change how business is done in Washington. . . . That's what
you need from a president -- someone who's going to tell you the
truth."
Obama is proposing to reduce the cost of driving by suspending
purchases for the country's Strategic Petroleum Reserve. Over the long term he
would also tax windfall oil profits and cap carbon emissions to provide rebates
for low-income Americans and money to invest in renewable-energy
research.
He supports ethanol, which is a boon to his state's corn
growers but has driven up food prices.
Leonard Burman, director of the
Tax Policy Center of the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institution, said the
laws of the market argue against a tax suspension. "Every summer, the refiners
are running full out. If the price fell, people would want to drive more and
there would be shortages," he said. "It's a basic economic principle that if the
supply is fixed, the price is going to be determined by demand."
Joining
in the criticism was House Majority Leader Steny H. Hoyer (D-Md.), who said that
the Democratic leadership of Congress has no intention of pursuing the summer
tax suspension that Clinton touted. The move "would not be positive," he said.
"The oil companies would just raise their prices."
Clinton stresses that
she, unlike McCain, would push for a windfall-profits tax on oil companies to
offset any benefit to them and replace the revenue loss to the highway trust
fund. Burman called this "utterly incoherent," saying that a windfall-profits
tax would over the long term only exacerbate the supply problems caused by
lifting the gas tax, because it would discourage the exploration for and
development of new sources of petroleum. "So a policy intended to lower prices,
but which won't do that, will be offset with a policy that's likely to raise
prices over the long term," he said.
Environmentalists noted that
suspending the gas tax also would undermine efforts to curb global warming
because it would increase the use of gasoline, a fossil fuel that contributes to
climate change. It would also reduce incentives for buying fuel-efficient
vehicles and developing alternative fuels. Relying on a windfall-profits tax to
replenish the highway fund would leave less to invest in renewable energy, which
is what Clinton had previously said a windfall tax would go toward.
More
generally, they said, stoking ire about the cost of gas undermines efforts to
build a case for limiting carbon emissions, which could raise prices at the
pump. "It sends a confusing message," said Kevin Knoblauch, president of the
Union of Concerned Scientists. "What's more helpful is if [politicians] help
consumers understand that this isn't about near-term gas prices, it's about a
comprehensive and smart approach to energy policies."
That leaves the
question, though, of whether the proposal will score points on the campaign
trail. In Kokomo, Ind., last week, Kathy Spier said the rising cost of gas is to
blame for the 50 percent drop-off in sales at her three exotic lingerie stores.
"They don't have extra money to spend on frivolous things," she
said.
Political consultant Carter Eskew, a former Al Gore adviser, said
that if he were advising Obama, he would have said: "If you want to oppose this
. . . you're going to have to spend a lot of time and energy
explaining.
"I don't think it's brilliant economics; unfortunately, it
may be good politics. The smart people say 'It's stupid,' and the people who
aren't as schooled say 'At least it will do something for me,' " he said. "I
don't know that anyone connects the dots: that there have been a series of
politically expedient decisions . . . that have added up to an economic picture
that is not at all rosy and in fact fairly disastrous." ++
Staff
writers Perry Bacon Jr. in North Carolina, Peter Slevin in Indiana and Jonathan
Weisman in Washington contributed to this report.
The
incredible shrinking presidency of George Walker Bush hit a new milestone
yesterday: The commander in chief turned to sorcery.
"You know, if there
was a magic wand to wave, I'd be waving it," Bush informed Sheryl Gay Stolberg
of the New York Times in a Rose Garden news conference.
She had asked
him about the recession, which everybody seems to be acknowledging but
Bush.
Further, the wizard of the West Wing said he would use his
supernatural powers, if he had them, to conjure up lower gas prices. "I think
that if there was a magic wand and say, 'Okay, drop price,' I'd do that," said
the illusionist.
Abracadabra! Watch the president pull a rabbit out of a
hat! See his low ratings vanish before your very eyes!
Well, not this
time. "There is no magic wand to wave right now," Bush finally confessed to
Stolberg.
But the president had something else up his sleeve. He used his
appearance before the White House press corps to perform one of the oldest
tricks in the book: blaming Congress. He faulted lawmakers 16 times in his
opening statement alone.
"Americans are understandably anxious about
issues affecting their pocketbook," he began, and "they're looking to their
elected leaders in Congress for action."
Implicit in his formulation was
that Americans no longer look to him for action. "Congress has repeatedly
blocked efforts," he protested. "Congress continues to block provisions. . . .
Congress needs to clear away obstacles. . . . Congress is considering a massive,
bloated farm bill. . . . Congress needs to do more. . . . I ask Congress to do
its part."
The reporters in the audience didn't fall for the
blame-Congress sleight-of-hand. "Gas prices have gone up, foreclosures have
gone up, there have been layoffs, news just this morning that consumer
confidence is down yet again," recited the Associated Press's Jennifer Loven.
"Isn't it time to think about doing more?"
"Were you premature in saying
that the U.S. economy is not in a recession?" needled Jeremy Pelofsky of
Reuters.
"Americans believe we are in a recession," pointed out American
Urban Radio's April Ryan. "What will it take for you to say those words, that we
are in a recession?"
The illusionist swirled his cape and turned that
into a question about Congress. "I mean, you know, the words on how to define
the economy don't reflect the anxiety the American people feel," he ventured.
Rubbing his nose, he continued: "The average person doesn't really care what we
call it. . . . These are difficult times. And the American people know it, and
they want to know whether or not Congress knows it."
Bush, sporting a
bright-green tie and a new haircut, employed many pyrotechnics during his Rose
Garden performance. He shook his head and made a sad shrug as he spoke of
Congress's many failures. He chopped at the lectern with his hand and slammed
his palm for emphasis as he told ABC News's Martha Raddatz about the "thugs and
killers" in Afghanistan. He teased Stolberg about the Times's boycott of
Saturday night's White House Correspondents' Association dinner. And he
chitchatted with Ryan, telling her she's "lookin' good in yellow" and asking
about her baby.
But diversions would get Bush only so far. After the
White House called the news conference, but half an hour before Bush stepped
from the Oval Office, the Conference Board announced that consumer confidence
fell in April to its lowest point since the Iraq invasion in 2003. That started
a new sell-off on Wall Street, where investors await today's report on economic
growth in the first quarter. "Are you concerned that they will show us to
officially be in a recession?" Stolberg asked Bush.
"I think they'll show
that we're -- it's a very slow economy," he replied.
The Washington
Post's Dan Eggen tried to put Bush in one of his least favorite places -- the
psychoanalyst's couch. "You've expressed frustration with Congress," he pointed
out. "Are you frustrated? Are you angry? And do you have any real hope of being
able to work with this Congress this year?"
Bush looked around, as if
puzzled. "I believe that they're letting the American people down, is what I
believe," he answered.
A chief way in which Congress is letting the
American people down, the president said, is by refusing to approve oil drilling
in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge.
"They've repeatedly blocked
environmentally safe exploration in ANWR," he said, depriving the nation of "27
million gallons of gasoline and diesel every day." This was one of the oldest
tricks under Bush's cloak -- he has been making the ANWR case, unsuccessfully,
for eight years -- and his delivery was a bit rusty.
"Repeatedly" came
out as "repleatedly," and "27 million gallons" became "27 millions of
gallons."
Reporters quickly pointed out that, whatever the merits of oil
exploration in ANWR, it is a long-term proposal that won't help this summer's
gas prices. "Opening up ANWR is not long-term," Bush objected. "It's
intermediate-term."
So now the president is reduced to arguing the
difference between long-term and intermediate-term. His is a slow and torturous
disappearing act. ++
Gasoline-tax reprieve: an idea running
on empty Minimal cost savings, increased dependence on foreign oil, and high
administrative costs are among reasons why this idea ran out of gas.
David R. Francis, Christian Science Monitor May 5,
2008 http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0502/p25s01-wmgn.html
The small
cartoon on the Tax Policy Center's website shows a man's head with a gaping hole
through it and the words "Stupid Tax Trick." The words refer to the proposal by
Republican Sen. John McCain to suspend the 18.4 cents per gallon federal excise
tax on gasoline between Memorial Day and Labor Day.
The presumptive
Republican presidential nominee's suggestion was quickly picked up by Sen.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, campaigning for the Democratic nomination. The idea,
however, died a quick death in the Senate last week at the hands of a Democratic
caucus drafting a bill aimed at giving relief from soaring gas prices. To many
economists and others, the short tax holiday didn't make much sense.
"It's a terrible idea," says economist Eric Toter, coauthor of the
article that accompanied the cartoon and was headlined, "What Were They
Thinking???"
Undoubtedly, they were thinking politics. A new survey by
the Kaiser Family Foundation found that paying for gasoline easily tops the list
of economic woes seen by American families. Some 44 percent of those surveyed
saw their gas bills as a "serious problem."
"It's out of the political
pandering playbook," says Robert Bixby, executive director of the Concord
Coalition, a nonpartisan organization pushing for elimination of the federal
budget deficit.
Sen. Barack Obama, Senator Clinton's rival for the
Democratic nomination, did reject the idea. On this issue, he's "the only one
that looks like a grown-up," comments Mr. Bixby.
President Bush also
disapproved. Of course, he's not running for office.
Here's why critics
say the gasoline-tax holiday plan is a bad idea:
•It wouldn't save the
average consumer much money. If a driver uses 10 gallons a week, he or she would
save about $26 during the three months – enough to buy seven or eight
milkshakes. A driver with a long commute to work would, potentially, save more.
So would the truck drivers who were circling the Capitol in a horn-blaring
caravan last week, angered by the 24.4 cents per gallon tax on diesel fuel.
The problem, says Mr. Toter, is that the cheaper fuel would encourage
Americans to drive more – say an extra trip to the beach. The end result – after
increased summer demand stretches American refining capacity to the limit –
would be even higher prices.
It wouldn't "do anything" for the consumer,
Toter concludes. It would just boost the already record profits of refiners and
oil companies.
An econometic analysis by Jeff Perloff, an economist at
the University of California, Berkeley, is not so harsh. Drivers might save 9 to
12 cents a gallon despite the rising demand, he reckons.
•The gas-tax
break would do nothing about United States dependence on imported oil, or, for
that matter, on a limited supply of domestic oil. Contrariwise, it would add to
consumption and to global-warming emissions.
"We are the laughing stock
of Europe because we keep [gasoline] taxes so cheap," notes Matthew Simmons,
chairman of a Houston-based investment bank for the energy industry, Simmons
& Co. International.
The state gasoline tax, which ranges as high as
32.1 cents in Wisconsin and as low as 8 cents in Alaska, averages 28.6 cents a
gallon. So, add in the federal tax, and the average tax totals 47 cents. Way low
by European standards. In Germany, for example, gas is taxed at about $2 per
gallon.
Only last January, a bipartisan commission appointed by Congress
recommended a 40-cent boost over five years in the federal gas tax with revenues
used to improve the nation's transportation system.
•The tax break would
add to the federal deficit. Gas-tax revenues normally go to the Highway Trust
Fund, which is used to maintain and improve the highway and public transit
systems. One proposal in Congress would have substituted Treasury revenues for
the lost HTF money.
•The change would be an administrative nightmare for
the nation's retail sellers of gasoline.
"It would be a logistical
challenge," says Jeff Lenard, spokesman for the convenience stores that sell 80
percent of the nation's gasoline supply.
At this time, Republicans and
Democrats are busily trying to blame each other for the troubling high gas
prices. For instance, sometimes more than once a day House Republican Leader
John Boehner issues a press release teasing Speaker Nancy Pelosi for not
presenting her long-promised "common sense plan" to lower gas prices.
For now, Washington is looking for other ways to hold down gasoline
prices. One popular idea is to stop filling the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. At
present it contains 701 million barrels, enough with private oil company
reserves to substitute for imported oil for 118 days. It is being filled at a
rate of 70,000 barrels daily, not a hefty amount compared with imports of 10.1
million barrels a day.
"We are addicted to petroleum, a source of energy
which is gradually going to disappear," warns Michael Klare, who teaches
international affairs at Hampshire College in Amherst, Mass. He says the US must
really work on "alternative" energy sources.
That's not a short-term
solution. ++
Gas Tax Holiday Is A Bad Idea Faiz
Shakir, Amanda Terkel, Satyam Khanna, Matt Corley, Ali Frick, Benjamin
Armbruster, and Brad Johnson, The Progress Report May 1,
2008 http://www.americanprogressaction.org/progressreport/
Rising gas
prices are hitting Americans hard, while oil companies rake in record profits.
As the economy falters, calls to deal with the price of gasoline have reached
the halls of Washington, D.C. "[L]awmakers are considering ideas they might have
nixed months ago, including temporarily lifting the federal gas tax and halting
deposits of oil into the Strategic Petroleum Reserve." Sens. John McCain (R-AZ)
and Hillary Clinton (D-NY) have called for a summer moratorium on the federal
gas tax. McCain has not specified how to make up the $11 billion; Clinton has
proposed a tax on windfall profits from oil companies to recoup losses to the
federal highway fund. Economic analysts of all stripes have responded with
horror, pointing out that "the benefits will flow to oil companies, not
consumers." Even if a suspension of the gas tax led to lower prices, the rich
would benefit the most, since "the more a family earns, the more they drive,"
notes Sam Davis of the Center for American Progress. Len Burman of the non
partisan Urban Institute calls the proposal "a huge windfall for refiners." New
York Times columnist Tom Friedman argues, "This is money laundering: we borrow
money from China and ship it to Saudi Arabia and take a little cut for ourselves
as it goes through our gas tanks." Newsweek's Jonathan Alter agrees, stating,
"Suspending the federal gas tax is a crass ploy for votes." The Atlantic
Monthly's James Fallows calls cutting the gas tax "destructive nuttiness" and
"embarrassing." Economist Gilbert Metcalf called it "very short-sighted,"
noting, "If we want people to invest in energy-saving cars, we need some
assurance that the higher price paid for these cars is going to pay off through
fuel savings."
WHAT'S TO BLAME FOR HIGH GAS PRICES:
President Bush said Tuesday that he has no "magic wand" to affect gas prices.
But as Steve Hargreaves of CNNMoneywrites, gas price is "all about government
policy." Since the United States has some of the lowest gas taxes in the world,
the price at the pump is dominated by the cost of oil. In congressional
testimony one month ago, Exxon Mobil senior vice president Stephen Simon said
his company believes the price of oil involves four components. The effects of
supply and demand accounts for "somewhere around $50-55 a barrel," or about half
the current price. The second factor is the weaker dollar; since 2001, "the
dollar has lost 45% of its value" against the euro. The third is "geopolitical
risk"; since 2003, the United States has been committed to a
three-trillion-dollar war in Iraq, the heart of the turbulent oil-producing
world. And the final component is "speculation"; investors have "looked to
commodities not only as a hedge against inflation but as a hedge against the
tumbling greenback."
IMMEDIATE ACTION: When asked by
Reuters abot the gas tax proposal, conservative economist Greg Mankiw
recommended, "If you want to provide households tax relief, a direct rebate...is
more effective." Center for American Progress analysts Sam Davis and Daniel J.
Weiss describe how a fast-acting "reliefbate" plan would work. Applied
progressively, the "reliefbate" would provide reprieve to 80 percent of American
households as well as all independent truckers, at a total cost of $23.2
billion, which "could easily be paid for by closing several oil tax loopholes
and recovering lost royalties." The Washington Post's Dan Froomkin further
recognizes that there are "two hugely significant factors" that Bush could take
action on immediately: "the war in Iraq and the value of the
dollar."
LONG-TERM SOLUTIONS: The fundamental solution
to gas prices is to reduce dependence on oil. As conservative economist Douglas
Holtz-Eakin said, "You have to price oil on a permanent basis to provide
incentives to shift away from it. It's the key issue -- and the hardest one to
make progress on." This year, the National Surface Transportation Policy and
Revenue Study Commission submitted a comprehensive plan for the future of the
transportation infrastructure, which fuel taxes fund. But the federal fuel tax
is but one brushstroke in a much broader picture. The Center for American
Progress's Energy Opportunity Agenda states, "The realities of global warming
and our growing dependence on oil, much of it imported, will make energy more
pivotal than ever to our economic, environmental, and national security fortunes
in the 21st century. The challenge we face is nothing short of the conversion of
an economy sustained by high-carbon energy -- putting both our national security
and the health of our planet at serious risk -- to one based on low-carbon,
sustainable sources of energy. The scale of this undertaking is immense and its
potential enormous." ++
At a White House news conference Tuesday,
President Bush sought to place much of the blame for the nation's economic woes
on Congress. Americans are "looking to their elected leaders in Congress for
action," Bush said. "Unfortunately, on many of these issues, all they're getting
is delay ... I've repeatedly submitted proposals to help address these problems.
Yet time after time Congress chose to block them." But at least one of the
solutions Bush offered during his remarks doesn't hold the promise he suggested,
and the statistics he cited to make his case were at best misleading.
"Members of Congress have been vocal about foreign governments
increasing their oil production, yet Congress has been just as vocal in
opposition to efforts to expand our production here at home," Bush said,
referring to efforts to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, in Alaska, to
oil drilling. "The Department of Energy estimates that ANWR could allow America
to produce about a million additional barrels of oil every day, which translates
to about 27 millions of gallons -- gallons of gasoline and diesel every day,"
Bush added. "That would be about a 20 percent increase of oil -- crude oil
production over U.S. levels -- and it would likely mean lower gas prices."
Notice he cited U.S. levels? That's a much, much lower bar to reach, as
-- according to the Energy Information Administration -- on any given day, the
U.S. imports almost twice as much crude oil as it produces. And while he
promised "about a million additional barrels of oil every day," he neglected to
mention that, according to Energy Literacy Advocates, the U.S. uses 21 million
barrels of oil a day. The additional production would account for less than five
percent of our current total oil use.
Moreover, Bush discussed the
opening of ANWR as a shorter-term solution than biofuels or hydrogen, and said,
"Somehow if you mention ANWR it means you don't care about the environment.
Well, I'm hoping now people, when they say ANWR, it means you don't care about
the gasoline prices that people are paying."
If people ever do use
Bush's chosen formulation, I hope they change it a little to conform with
reality -- I'd suggest something like, "When they say ANWR, it means you don't
care about the gasoline prices that people will be paying 20 years from now." In
2004, the EIA released a report saying that if Congress were to allow drilling
in ANWR that year, the oil would not actually begin flowing until 2013 and peak
production would not be reached until 2025. Even then, according to the
Associated Press, oil prices would be reduced by less than 50 cents a barrel
(assuming oil was at about $27 a barrel -- as of this post, even after a
decline, light, sweet crude for delivery in June was at $116.44 a barrel). And
"even at peak production, the EIA analysis said, the United States would still
have to import two-thirds of its oil, as opposed to an expected 70 percent if
the refuge's oil remained off the market." ++
Both
Qatar's oil minister and the head of OPEC can see oil hitting $200 a barrel
before the end of the year and one analyst says gas could reach $7 a gallon
within four years. That could mean cataclysm for the global economy.
The
world got a little relief today when BP reopened its North Sea pipeline. But the
price of gas is averaging $3.60 a gallon and the price of oil is flirting with
$120 a barrel with no relief in sight. Market forces don't seem to be
functioning in their normal order. OPEC controls only about half of the world's
oil supply. Ordinarily, when prices spike skyward, the world's non-cartel
spigots open wide. Why isn't this happening and who's to blame?
Oil
Companies. Admittedly, obscenely compensated oil executives are laying low these
days. Big Oil is rolling in profits. The Bush Administration's tax subsidies to
oil companies, which were intended to prod exploration, should infuriate
commuters.
And yet the profit margins of oil giants are only slightly
higher than the average for the S&P 500. And much of the wealth from these
companies is pumped back into the economy in dividends, employment, capital
spending and the like. Big Oil shouldn't get a walk (and windfall profit taxes
make more sense than ever). But it's only a small part of the
problem.
China and India. It seems to be a global fact that an automobile
signals your arrival into the middle class. Without question, demand for oil in
these countries is putting an inexorable upward push on gas prices. This isn't
going to change in your lifetime, and it should sound the alarm for North
Americans and Europeans that their middle-class lives will be threatened unless
they develop alternative forms of energy -- fast. But the increasing demand for
oil in China and India is a long-term trajectory. It doesn't explain recent
spikes. And in the short term, it's self correcting. As oil prices spike,
economies slow and the demand for oil eases. So does its price.
Ben
Bernanke. Oil is currently priced in U.S. dollars. The Federal Reserve has
feverishly tried to calm credit markets in recent months with lower interest
rates, which are a kind of Valium for bankers. As interest rates drop, so does
the value of the dollar. So it takes more dollars to buy a barrel of oil.
Without question, the credit crisis is a more pressing concern than high gas
prices. Credit, after all, is the life blood of an economy. It is widely
expected that tomorrow the Feds will reduce interest rates again. But many
analysts believe this is the last cut we'll see for a while. Fighting inflation
-- including rising gasoline prices -- is becoming a priority. When interest
rates begin inching up again, it will be bad news if you're taking out a car
loan, good news at the pump. In the meantime, just be glad you don't have Ben
Bernanke's job.
Speculators. It's never a good omen when fear swallows
reason on the trading floor. But this seems to explain part of what's happening
with the price of oil. Or maybe it's just greed. Whatever. The good news is that
these speculative frenzies tend to end quickly. And ultimately, it's traders'
fingers that get burned, not consumers.
Suppliers. Here's the mysterious
missing piece in high gas prices: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar and other OPEC
members try to keep supplies tight and prices high. But England, Norway, Russia
and other non-OPEC countries open the spigots to take advantage of high prices.
This usually brings prices down. But supply disruptions have become rife -- even
with OPEC countries, such as Nigeria, thanks to an insurgency that keeps
shutting down its pipeline. Norway's production has dropped by 25 percent since
its peak in 2001. Britain's has dropped by 43 percent. Alaska's Prudhoe Bay has
dropped by 65 percent from its peak. Russia's is down and so is Mexico's. It's
enough to make you think speculators are on to something.
"So keep
fightin' for freedom and justice, beloveds, but don't you forget to have fun
doin' it. Lord, let your laughter ring forth. Be outrageous, ridicule the
fraidy-cats, rejoice in all the oddities that freedom can produce. And when you
get through kickin' ass and celebratin' the sheer joy of a good fight, be sure
to tell those who come after how much fun it was." ~ Molly Ivins, 1944 -
2007
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