Supply & Demand (gas prices)

Discussion in 'Texas Bikers' started by Solaratov, May 1, 2006.

  1. Solaratov

    Solaratov Guest

    Say It With Me: Supply and Demand

    By Charles Krauthammer
    Friday, April 28, 2006; Page A19

    If you thought the Dubai port deal marked a record high in Washington
    cynicism, think again. Nothing can match the spectacle of politicians
    scrambling for cover during a spike in gasoline prices. And this time
    the panderfest has gone all the way to the Oval Office. President Bush
    has joined the braying congressional hordes by ordering the Energy and
    Justice departments and the Federal Trade Commission to launch an
    investigation into possible gasoline price fixing.

    What a disgrace.
    Precisely 10 years ago (April 29, 1996) as gas prices reached a
    shocking $1.27 a gallon, President Bill Clinton ordered his Energy and
    Justice departments to launch investigations to find out why. In my
    column that week, I offered a wild guess as to why: "supply is down
    and demand is up." I offered Energy Secretary Hazel O'Leary and
    Attorney General Janet Reno a $100 bet (I roll high on sure things)
    that their million-dollar probes would do nothing more than confirm my
    hunch.

    No takers. Even Cabinet secretaries don't throw away C-notes. Sure
    enough, months later these perfectly pointless investigations
    discounted charges of price gouging and attributed the price hike to .
    .. . increased demand and decreased supply.

    Today, every time an Iranian mullah opens his mouth about nukes, the
    risk premium for Persian Gulf supply interruptions jumps again. Crude
    oil prices alone account for about $1.70 of what you pay for a gallon
    at the pump. So 10 years later, I'll wager again. Here's what the Bush
    search for price gougers and profiteers will find:

    · Demand is up. China has come from nowhere to pass Japan as the
    number No. 2 oil consumer in the world. China and India -- between
    them home to eight times the U.S. population -- are industrializing
    and gobbling huge amounts of energy.

    American demand is up because we've lived in a fool's paradise since
    the mid-1980s. Until then, beginning with the oil shocks in 1973,
    Americans had changed appliances and cars and habits and achieved
    astonishing energy conservation. Energy use per dollar of gross
    domestic product was cut by 30 percent in little over a decade. Oil
    prices collapsed to about $10 a barrel.

    Then amnesia set in, mile-per-gallon ratings disappeared from TV ads
    and we became "a country of a million Walter Mittys driving 75 mph in
    their gas-guzzling Bushwhack-Safari sport-utility roadsters with a
    moose head on the hood, a country whose crude oil production has
    dropped 32 percent in the last 25 years but which will not drill for
    oil in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge for fear of disturbing the
    mating habits of caribou."

    I wrote that during the '96 witch hunt for price gougers. Nothing has
    changed. Except that since then, U.S. crude oil production has dropped
    an additional 12.3 percent. Which brings us to:

    · Supply is down. Start with supply disruptions in Nigeria, decreased
    production in Iraq, and the continuing loss of 5 percent of our
    national refining capacity because of damage from hurricanes Katrina
    and Rita. Add to that the mischief of idiotic new regulations. Last
    year's energy bill mandates arbitrary increases in blended ethanol use
    that so exceed current ethanol production that it is causing gasoline
    shortages and therefore huge price spikes.

    Why don't we import the missing ethanol? Brazil makes a ton of it, and
    very cheaply. Answer: the Iowa caucuses. Iowa grows corn and chooses
    presidents. So we have a ridiculously high 54-cent ethanol tariff and
    ethanol shortages.

    Another regulation requires specific ("boutique") gasoline blends for
    different cities depending on their air quality. Nice idea. But it
    introduces debilitating rigidities into the gasoline supply system. If
    Los Angeles runs short, you cannot just move supply in from Denver.
    You get shortages and more price spikes.

    And don't get me started on the missing supply of might-have-been
    American crude. Arctic and outer continental shelf oil that the
    politicians kill year after year would have provided us by now with a
    critical and totally secure supply cushion in times of tight markets.

    In March 2000, the price of gas hit $1.80 per gallon. Scandalized
    congressional Republicans shamelessly pushed for repeal of Clinton's
    whopping 4.3-cent gas tax increase. Now that the president is a
    Republican, what do you think Senate Democrats are proposing? A 60-day
    suspension of the federal gas tax. It would cost $6 billion and
    counteract the only good thing that comes with high gas prices -- the
    incentive to conserve.

    George Shultz once said, "Nothing ever gets settled in this town." But
    even Shultz, who has seen everything, must marvel at the perfect
    regularity, the utter predictability, of the bottomless cynicism of
    Washington in the grip of gasoline fever.
     
    Solaratov, May 1, 2006
    #1
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  2. how many deaf ears do you think this is falling upon ?
    i can think of a few who would hate to see their worldview disturbed
    when it's so much easier to blame a massive conspiracy (despite
    overwhelming evidence to the contrary).
     
    another viewer, May 1, 2006
    #2
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