Friday, August 21, 2009

July 2008 Assessment of Afghan situation

McClatchy Washington Bureau

Posted on Thu, Jul. 31, 2008
Commentary: A top general says more troops aren't the answer in Afghanistan
Joseph L. Galloway | McClatchy Newspapers

last updated: July 31, 2008 06:27:21 PM

There's military slang that seemingly applies to the situation on the ground in Afghanistan today. The operative acronym is FUBAR - Fouled Up Beyond All Recognition. That first letter doesn't really stand for "Fouled," and the R sometimes stands for Repair.

One of the sharper military analysts I know has just returned from a tour of that sorrowful nation, which has been at war continuously since the Soviet Army invaded it in late 1979.

Gen. Barry McCaffrey, who retired from the U.S. Army with four stars and a chest full of combat medals including two Distinguished Service Crosses, says we can't shoot our way out of Afghanistan, and the two or three or more American combat brigades proposed by the two putative nominees for president are irrelevant.

McCaffrey predicts that 2009 will be the year of decision as the Taliban and a greatly enhanced presence of "foreign fighters" try to sever roads and halt road construction to strangle and isolate the capital, Kabul and attack NATO units that are hamstrung by restrictions and rules of engagement dictated by their home governments.
More ominously, the general says, we can expect a Taliban drive to erase Afghanistan's border with Pakistan in the wild frontier provinces of Pakistan that have provided sanctuary for Taliban and al Qaida leaders and fighters since Osama bin Laden escaped there in 2001.

The general says that despite the two presidential candidates' sound bites, a few more combat brigades from "our rapidly unraveling Army" won't make much difference in Afghanistan.

Military means, he writes, won't be enough to counter terror created by resurgent Taliban forces; we can't win with a war of attrition; and the economic and political support from the international community is inadequate.

"This is a struggle for the hearts of the people, and good governance, and the creation of Afghan security forces," McCaffrey writes. He says the main theater of war is in frontier regions pf Afghanistan and Pakistan, and the combatants are tribes, religious groups, criminals and drug lords.

It'll take a quarter-century of nation-building, road and bridge building, the building of a better-trained and better-armed Afghan National Police and National Army and the eradication of a huge opium farming industry to achieve a good outcome in Afghanistan, McCaffrey wrote in his report to leaders at the U.S. Military Academy at West Point.

We can't afford to fail in Afghanistan, the general says, but he doesn't address the question of whether we can afford to succeed there, either.

McCaffrey writes that the situation in Afghanistan is dire, and is going to get a lot worse in the 24 months ahead. The country is in abject misery - 68 percent of the population has never known peace; average life expectancy is 44 years; maternal mortality is the second-highest in the world; terrorist violence and attacks are up 34 percent this year; 2.8 million Afghans are refugees in their own country; unemployment is 40 percent and rising; some 41 percent of the population lives in extreme poverty; the only agricultural success story is a $4 billion opium crop producing a huge amount of heroin, and the government at province and district level is largely dysfunctional and corrupt.

The battle will only be won, McCaffrey says, when there's a real Afghan police presence in all of the country's 34 provinces and 398 districts; when the Afghan National Army is expanded from 80,000 troops today to 200,000 troops; when we deploy five U.S. combat engineer battalions with a brigade of Army Stryker forces for security to begin a five-year road building program that also trains Afghan Army engineer units and employs Afghan contractors and workers.

Without NATO, we're lost in Afghanistan, he writes. But NATO's level of commitment and engagement in Afghanistan is woefully inadequate - European troops are restricted by their political leaders at home, risk-averse in a dangerous environment and almost totally unequipped with the tools needed for an effective counter-insurgency campaign - helicopters, intelligence, logistics, engineers, civil affairs and special operations units, precision munitions, medical support and cash to prime local economic efforts.

As for neighboring Pakistan and bellicose American threats to cross the border and mount more attacks on insurgents there, McCaffrey says this would be a "political disaster" that would imperil any Pakistan support for our campaign and likely result in Pakistan's weak civilian government shutting off American supply routes into Afghanistan.

Our efforts in Afghanistan, inadequate though they may be, now cost $34 billion each year and clearly this would have to be substantially increased if the fixes McCaffrey prescribes are to be implemented.

As good as the American ground troops operating in Afghanistan are - many are on their third or fourth combat deployments there or in Iraq - McCaffrey says our military is under-resourced and too small for the national strategy we've been pursuing.

The general concludes his report by writing: "This is a generational war to build an Afghan state and prevent the creation of a lawless, extremist region which will host and sustain enduring threats to the vital national security interests of the United States and our key allies."

This ought to be a wake-up call for all Americans, and for John McCain and Barack Obama. Now there's a sound bite for them.
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Friday, August 14, 2009

BBC: Indian land 'seriously degraded'

Indian land "seriously degraded"
At least 45% of Indian land is environmentally "degraded", air pollution is rising and flora and fauna is diminishing, according to a report.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/south_asia/8196861.stm >

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BBC: India's water use 'unsustainable'

** India's water use 'unsustainable' **
Parts of India are on track for severe water shortages, according to results from Nasa's gravity satellites.
< http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/em/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/8197287.stm >


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Administrative renewal


For A New Start, Administration Needs Self Appraisal

Anand Sarup (IAS, Retd) sarupanand@hotmail.com 26-09-2007

To most outsiders, officers look like all powerful functionaries running the government. They also imagine that those of them who toe the line laid down by their superiors, senior bosses or ministers, do so by choice. This is not true. People are servile (i.e. do 'ji-huzoorie' to the extent they deem it necessary for their survival but in the process there is an inevitable loss of self esteem. How servile anyone will be depends not only upon the individuals concerned but also on the demands of the system.

'Ji-huzoori' is essentially a feudal phenomenon. It is quite inconsistent with democracy which requires that whatever is done should provide scope for change. Even during Nehru's regime, Chandra Bhan Gupta had to give up the Chief Ministership because of his differences with him. It would be recalled that one of the most brilliant members of the ICS, A. N. Jha, when he was Chief Secretary of U.P. used to touch Govind Vallabh Pant's feet. Even in the fifties, Rajeshwar Prasad, one of the most upright and hardworking collectors of Etawah District was transferred telephonically because he had refused to toe the line laid down by Hotilal Aggarwal, the congress boss of the district.

In the relatively immediate past, one can name many officers of not only the IAS, IPS, the Income Tax Services, the Central Secretariat Service but also of Technical Services who made tonnes of money and also got to the highest positions in their respective cadres, by doing whatever they were told by their 'superiors'. Once a person belonging to the Income Tax Services, known widely as the 'Khalnayak' became chairman of the CBDT. In a meeting, he recounted how he had been lampooned and asked, of those present, as to how many of them would be prepared to be called 'khalnayaks'. He was surprised and pleased when a large number came forward to accept this nomenclature.

The imposition of Emergency has now been declared, during the sixtieth anniversary of freedom, by some well known journals, as the most shameful event in our recent history. It is being stated openly that many very well known people: politicians and also those in government service, took obviously illegal orders from Sanjay Gandhi and his chief aide, Mr Dhawan, formally a mere personal secretary to the Indira Gandhi.

One knows of many people who-as Mr L.K.Advani put it, "crawled when they were required only to bend", have been Cabinet Secretaries, Chairmen of the Railway Board and even Governors and Ministers of the Central Government. This, one knows is because the rulers who came after emergency found such people more convenient than spirited and uncompromising functionaries.

I can't forget how two of my friends abjectly and publicly touched the feet of politicians with doubtful credential; one to go and join an assignment abroad and the other to become Chief Secretary in his home state.

Why go back very far in time. Look at the situation now. Who can stay on as a minister if he or she defies Smt Sonia Gandhi even on a matter of principle? And, who can continue as a Secretary to Government if he or she tells the Minister that what he or she wants done is dishonest and dishonourable. Normally, this 'helplessness' goes right down the line because people are desperate to get to the top and/ or also to be allowed to make money.

Unfortunately, most outsiders, who write copiously about systemic reforms do not know how almost all categories of government servants have allowed themselves to be enslaved by a system of character roll entries which militates against freedom of thought and free expression of advice to their superiors. Actually, while choosing people for appointment to top jobs, one particular minister preferred to appoint generally those who had been his students and who were politically aligned with his party - and therefore, six of his appointees fulfilled these qualifications.

Even now - and this is based on inquires from recently retired Cabinet Secretaries and Joint and Additional Secretaries still in service - to become a Secretary to Government of India, one needs to 'earn' either excellent or outstanding (good or very good are not good enough) entries during the ten preceding years or have a powerful minister stand up for special treatment for him or her.

If one looks at this rationally, one would readily admit that even a bonded slave would find it extremely difficult to obtain such superlative endorsements from his or her masters, for ten years without a break. What kind of independent inputs can one expect from a bureaucracy which accepts such a system of intellectual slavery?

How can people acquiescing to such functional and moral subordination retain any self–esteem and if they have lost this essential quality, how can one expect them to resist the temptation to obtain lucrative jobs by paying a lump sum to the appointing authority and then to make money, hand over fist, without any fear.

Road to Reforming the System

While it should be self- evident that the present system of promotions is antithetical to freedom of thought or expression, it is also true that there has to be some system to identify not only outstanding government functionaries but also those who have systematically 'managed'' the system by bribery and sycophancy and, therefore, are on their way to the top positions in their cadres. One would have suggested that the system of annual reports being shown to the officers concerned and then these being sent to higher authorities, together with the representations of those adversely affected, might be used as a safeguard but this practice has proved to be a total failure in the army.

Given the complexity of the system, it seems that one must start with a set of tentative suggestions. Then, a preliminary design for a more objective system should be prepared. Thereafter, it should be finalised after discussions with serving officers of various seniorities. Some considerations, which come to mind in this context, are that:

(i) those who have, in aggregate, spent more than three years as Private Secretaries or Principal Secretary to ministers should get a lower rating than other who have worked in less sheltered positions;

(ii) the entries earned by people in postings in international agencies should be disregarded (and if possible, these people should also - in view of the extraordinary benefits obtained by them from their foreign masters - lose seniority to the extent of their absence from their cadres);

(iii) considering the logic of regarding those who earn all degrees from one University, from the beginning to the end of education, being considered not quite equal to those who got their degrees from different institutions, those who have functioned largely from a similarly in-bred situation should be judged with a pinch of salt;

(iv) Any character roll entry, unusually superlative or adverse, immediately following a change of regime, should be looked upon with suspicion;

(v) At the time of promotion to the next higher level, every officer in the reckoning should be shown his/ her annual entries over the last ten years and given an opportunity to discuss his performance with a committee consisting of the Cabinet Secretary, the Finance Secretary, the Health/ Education/ Panchayati Raj (etc) ministers;

It must be obvious from the above that evolving a new system of evaluation is extremely difficult and it can't be done at the drop of a hat. Therefore, it is suggested that after some preliminary thinking and formulations, the matter should be referred to all professional associations (and certainly NOT trade unions, who would recommend simple time-bound promotions based on seniority) for considering and recommending a system of award and evaluation of character roll entries.

It is obvious that any system to be put up for replacing the present system which creates a kind of personal and intellectual slavery must, inter alia, ensure that:

(a) financial integrity must be duly encouraged;

(b) conditions must be created for encouraging and requiring government servants to think freely and express their views without fear, making it clear that compromising with what is right and wrong and failing to say it would be considered as condemnable as making money or accepting other favours;

(c) the system must discourage getting ahead by stabbing colleagues, particularly seniors or equals, in the back;

(d) due importance must be given to seniority and also maintenance of the feeling of fraternity;

(e) Restructuring of state and central cadres, and for this, creating a continuing open forum for discussions on changing systems, perspectives and policies; and

(f) establishment and encouragement of State Level and National Level Associations of All India Services and also suitably structured professional (and NOT TRADE UNIONS) Associations of all other services; and

(g) Establishment of Associations of Retired Officers who, hopefully, would not be afraid of speaking out their minds.

The author retired as Secretary to Government of India

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Peak Resource Supply and the World Economic Crisis

PEAK RESOURCE SUPPLY &
WORLD ECONOMIC CRISIS

Looking Back on the Race to the Summit
by Andrew McKillop
Author & Consultant
July 3, 2008

Vintage Growth versus Limited Natural Resources

Later on, we can ask a few simple questions. Say that China and/or India attained even European rates of car ownership – around 450 cars per 1000 population in the EU-27 or even more extremely the US and Canadian rate of over 700 – what would China and India’s oil consumption be, using the world average 9 barrels per car and per year? This question, it seems, is a lot too complex for G-8 leaders meeting in Osaka on 4 July 2008. Instead, they asked the world’s oil exporters to produce more oil and drive down the price, and the revenues they get “for the good of us all”. Maybe not exactly for the good of oil exporters, like G-8 Canada and Russia, even by the most stupid exporter can conclude. Their best strategy is easy to describe: cap production, stretch resources, and keep prices – and revenues – high for as long as bloated OECD importers, and bloating Emerging Economy importers care to go on with their oil addiction.

The race is on! The old model of ‘stable non inflationary growth’ promised by New Economy gurus and defenders fell by the wayside around 2002-2004, replaced by what I call Petro Keynesian growth and now that model, too, is under imminent threat of cyclic and structural demise. In the old New Economy model, carefully selected paper asset classes in the Old Economy OECD countries – favorites were housing and property, Internet and tech stocks, health care, finance services - could be inflated and shuffled round the Old World’s Teflon stock exchanges, to the glory of almost all player. This was capitalism for the masses ! The model held right through the 1990s until around 2004, but was then, and totally replaced by Petro Keynesian growth. Following this systemic shock, the hopes of equities investing masses were dumped into ‘classic’ 1970s-style stagflation from mid-2008.

Petro Keynesian growth, we can note, is the driver for vintage-style growth of the so-called Emerging Economies, which also levered up world economic growth, including the sluggish OECD economies, to about 5%pa in 2005-2007, but certainly and surely less going forward.

The pressure on energy and natural resource supplies both caused and generated by Petro Keynesian growth, and by pent-up demand in Emerging Economies sets a full stop for the easy ride of guaranteed low inflation from cheap basic resource inputs to the growth process. These cheap resource inputs, while they lasted, also helped start the Emerging Economies lever up their industrial base, and launch their growth surge, through keeping a lid on interest rates through slowing global inflation. More important in some ways, inside the OECD ‘postindustrial’ countries, their long-term decline was masked by imported deflation and a tidal wave of cheap but classically industrial consumer goods from the Emerging Economies, to help maintain the illusion of ‘universal prosperity’.

The Petro Keynesian model cranked up economic growth through high and rising energy and natural resource commodity prices, high liquidity, low real interest rates, increasing worldwide solvency, and record high trade growth. Any faltering in the growth surge, however, triggers fast-mounting inflation worldwide, certainly not sparing the ‘postindustrial’ OECD countries, where falling growth ends with stagflation. Late summer 2008 marks a turning point for growth, but not necessarily for inflation, which can go on to exotic highs when, or if interest rates are raised in an atavistic flirt with textbook ideas on fighting inflation. Textbook theories might promise that after some ‘necessary pain’ when interest rates are hiked, Old Economy OECD countries can have a remake of the 1990s, returning to the imagined security of the previous New Economy model.

The ‘resource garrot’ in fact even applied in the 1990s New Economy era of slow economic growth, low inflation, high interest rates, cheap energy and cheap natural resources. By the early 1990s in the case of oil and gas, by 1995-96 in the case of certain food commodities, metals and minerals, prices were tending to break out on the upside, from time to time, but could always be talked back into their boxes. Today, some hope aloud, Volker-style early 1980s-model slugging interest rate hikes might be the only and final solution, bringing the world back to its senses after some ritual pain. In fact this interest rate medecine, today, would bring hyperinflation, and pretty much a final solution for the world value of many currencies, starting with the US dollar, but certainly not sparing the Euro and Yen. In turn, this would deliver no sure ticket to peace, harmony and tranquility, financial or other.

Systemic Problems

Resource supply shortage is now manifest both on the supply side, as well as the demand side. Approaching peak resource supply limits, to be sure, is a potent driver of natural resource prices, keeping one cylinder of Petro Keynesianism going. Until now in mid-2008 this garrot and its levering-up of resource prices in absolute terms, and relative to paper resources, was partly masked by the process also delivering strong growth impacts, and specially the key impact of intensified, force-fed global economic growth. As economic growth falters then shrinks, resource supply limits will take on a bigger and clearer role in chellenging unsure economic, political and social models of ‘progress’.

The continuing process of resource rarefaction also brings us nearer to multiple break points in the current and recent, straight-line rush to peak output rates and capacities for a growing series of basic resources. These span an impressive range, stretching through water, soil resources, animal and plant gene stocks, world fish stocks, regional bioresources, mineral fertilisers, oil- and gas-source chemical bases, several key metals including tin, copper, gold, rare and strategic metals, iron ore and bauxite, food grains, vegetable oils, uranium, coal, natural gas and oil.

As we are forced to conclude, the real bases of the 1990s New Economy were a host of unrepeatable circumstances, for example the end of Soviet communism, and adoption by Chinese communists of ‘ultra-liberal’ export-led industrial growth policies. On the resource side, cheap oil was mightily aided by Russia’s industrial collapse, massive poverty an unemployment under ethanol-fuelled Yeltsin, liberating extra supply for importers. Global minerals and metals supply, in the 1990s, were in almost structural overcapacity, following breakneck growth of capacity in the 1970s. Not negligeable as another potent factor, world population was around 2 billion persons less than today, in the 1980s. In brief, a host of one-shot, once-only conditions made the New Economy possible.

To be sure, this fact is accepted as a debating chamber theme, and even climate change is accepted by many as ‘real’, but when comfortable economic models are shaken hard, unwise decisions are rather certain. Under extreme danger for steady-as-you-go growth of equity values, and linked pension plans, a kneejerk retreat into atavistic Volker-style early 1980s solutions is far from unlikely.

We can summarize by saying the reasons why the New Economy worked were special, and transient. They most specially included ultra-cheap basic resources, spanning all categories, from energy and metals to bioresources and water. Our problem is that now, in second semester 2008, its successor Petro Keynesian model faces equally sharp limits to its credibility and survival value.

From Price Taker to Inflation Giver

Anybody producing Sunset Commodities, in New Economics mythology, could only be a Price Taker – because oversupply was ‘permanent and structural’. We can place a figure to this ‘permanence’, at about 15 to 18 years, from the later 1980s to around 2004. Cheap resources had a two-part heritage being mothered by heavy investment in new capacity during the 1970s, in the previous resources boom, and fathered by post-1980 semi-stagnation in the world economy, setting a tight lid on demand. Since that time, apart from about 2 billion persons added to world population, the oil-hungry world car fleet has grown by about 600 million units, and world oil consumption has grown by about 24 million barrels/day.

Inside the Old Economy OECD countries, where “New Economy” was the buzzword among the invest-and-thrive middle classes, during the long decade of cheap oil and resources, this doctrine’s on-the-ground impact specially included an orgy of house price speculation, called ‘rational investing’. This lasted up to 20 years, in some countries. Attempts to keep the patient alive and blissfully ignore every sign of clinical death, from around 2004, included the US subprime rout.

In textbook fashion, perhaps, some of the paper capital from this long property boom was transferred to, and shuffled into a recurring series of non-property paper asset booms, through the 1990s. This reached ultimate highs in the dotcom/ hi-tech bubble and ‘communications related’ boom of 1998-2001. Today’s lookalike is the Alternate & Renewable Energy asset bubble. This promises, that is threatens an equally capricious, wasteful and non-productive allocation of resources, followed by a massive slump in popular interest and asset values.

Keeping manufactured products ultra-cheap, like the natural resources and energy needed to make, package and transport them was both necessary, and easy for a certain period. New Economics prescribed the delocalisation of almost any and all consumer good industries, and many services to emerging China, India, Turkey, Pakistan, Brazil, the Philippines, Morocco and any other low wage export platform, anywhere outside the Old World old economy. As to future competition for energy and natural resources from these emerging economies, the New Economy gurus had nothing to say. Maybe it was a long way down the line, maybe people in the emerging economies would turn to house price inflation and hamburger flipping as their mainstay activity, and become ‘lean and mean’ in per capita energy and resource demand, like postindustrial USA and France or Italy, or not-so-postindustrial Japan, South Korea or Germany. This refrain was often heard from great professors of the New Economy, always generous with brain-dead one-liners.

Time was up within a few brief years of vintage economic growth. To be sure, some New Economy gurus could perhaps imagine, and write that the emerging economies would not want to reproduce the Old Rich OECD model of hyper consumption. India, for example, would stay at 20 cars per 1000 population, and not try for the European average of around 500, or the high ground of US car owwnership, about 725 cars per 1000. Tata Corp’s ‘Nano’ car at a subatomic price of below 2500 US dollars clearly shows which way Indian car ownership will go – and grow.

The only bottom line in the short-term is ‘decoupled’ growth of energy and resource demand. Any shallow recession in the OECD North will have almost no impact on global oil or other resource prices. Stagflation, with a growing risk of hyperinflation remains a logical outcome inside the OECD North, but for some while yet the Petro Keynesian machine can roar at full power in the emerging South – if reserves of global oil and gas, and other key ‘quantitative growth model’ resource inputs stretch that far. This is far from sure and certain, and getting less so all the time.

Things Have to Change

OECD hyper consumption of energy and natural resources is an unfortunate but real world fact. This ‘quantitatve model of progress’ was at no time assumed to be permanent – as we are finding today, even the Arctic polar ice cap is not permanent. By the same token, why would hyper consuming societies be ‘durable’ when their basic resource inputs include so many non renewables, and theoretically renewable resources which in practice, due to extreme rates of demand are transformed into ‘one-shot’ depletables ? Today, in the OECD group, per capita consumption rates may be stagnant for some natural resources, others may be falling a little, notably per capita oil consumption in part due to distressingly high oil prices, and the simple physical difficulty of attaining 3 cars for every 4 persons. Rising food prices also pose a challenge: food spending is now the second-biggest item in average OECD household budgets, after oil, gas and electricity, but folks still need to eat.

To be sure, our decider political elites, who like their voters worry about climate change at weekends, now urge a redoubled effort to increase economic growth, if only to slow the growth of national debt. The Alternative & Renewable Energy asset bubble is therefore a handy new support for seeking ways to maintain, or increase consumption of cement, steel, hi-tech metals, silicon ingots, complex mechanical parts and assemblies, transport to site, construction services, and a panoply of downstream impacts. Frenetic construction of windfarms and hi tech, energy intensive solar cell arrays, built in factories using ‘clean’ electricity produced from good old coal and far from zero-emission natural gas, are seen by deciders as useful growth boosters, if nothing else.
As usual and as ever, fiddling with the details while the temple burns is an old habit in dying empires. Grafting-on renewable energy gadgets to the fossil energy pyramid can change its shape, when viewed from the right distance, but does little to cut its height. OECD resource intensity per capita is still extreme, despite the ‘postindustrial’ name tag.

The inconvenient truth is simple and obvious: Per capita consumption rates of the OECD Old Rich countries cannot be replicated in the Emerging Economies. The current, heroic, flat-out attempts of Chinese and Indian, and other Emerging Economy leaderships to replicate the OECD urban industrial hyper consumption ‘model’ will at some quite near-term stage be abandoned – or collapse. The options are simple, and breakpoint decision time is getting closer.

Simply taking demand for food and agrocommodities, one way of explaining the giddy upward rush of prices due to unstoppable demand growth is to do a back-of-envelope calculation of food demand growth due to 15 years of accumulated, break-neck industrial and urban growth in China, India, Brazil and Pakistan, Turkey, Bangladesh, Vietnam and other, smaller emerging economies. We can set the agrocommodities demand spiral as a context where about 1000 million persons, thanks to vintage economic growth moved up from 1 meal a day, to 2 meals a day. And where about 400 million persons who almost never ate meat or fish at all, now eat them at least once a week. This of course leaves another 900 million or 1000 million with no meal a day, potential Global Economy consumers more than interested in the idea of consuming more food, and right behind in the queue to get there.

We can make a weak, unconvincing attempt to forecast massive and sustained growth of the truck, bus, motorcycle and car industry in the Emerging Economies, a 20 or 30-year growth fest like the 1950-80 Trente Glorieuse of the Old Rich OECD countries. This base of the decoupling theory is nothing if ‘quantitative’, and currently still is the textbook model for Emerging Economy growth. During the Trente Glorieuse countries like Japan, Germany, Australia, France or Italy moved from under 50 cars per 1000 population, to around 400. China and India, and other current lower income emerging economies could in theory replicate this feat, achieving car ownership rates of 400 or 500 cars per 1000 population. This splendid textbook ‘quantitative’ economic feat would generate the same near-saturation levels of car ownership we have today in the USA, Europe, Japan and South Korea. Not at all coincidentally, these are the most oil-intensive, CO2 emitting economies and societies of the planet. Claiming to be concerned about the ‘qualitative’ diseconomies of the quantitative model is expressed as political support for action against climate change and for the environment.

Doing something about these challenges surely means close attention to quantitative indicators of hyper consumption. When we move on to look at per capita demand for refrigerators, microwave ovens, cellphones and PCs, air travel, plastic packaging, meat-based grain-intensive food habits, multi-lane highways and steel-frame skyscraper buildings there really is No Limit to quantitative growth. Aspirants to this model of ‘universal prosperity’ are widely spread round the world – and most of them are very poor, at present.

To be sure, details such as real world quantitative supply capacities for natural resources are not attractive debating subjects for most world political leaderships. Even the consumer herd in the Old Rich OCED countries shows a marked tendency to only being interested in ‘ecology’ at weekends, in the evenings and on holiday. When these subjects start to hit their pocketbooks, they go into meltdown, seeking any way out of the mess that restores what they had before. Pressure for ‘classical solutions’ like military-backed resource grab steadily mount, as gasoline prices rise.

Doctrinal Poverty and Staying Poor

One of the miracles of New Economy doctrine, which for a 20-year eyeblink in modern history had an almost total stranglehold on economic ‘thinking’ in the Old Rich OECD countries, around 1985-2000, was its real, but of course loudly denied dependence on the poor staying poor and the rich getting richer. Yet the same doctrine, when it collapsed and mutated to Petro Keynesianism, also sought the nearly instant exhaustion of world natural resource, notably the world’s oil and natural gas reserves, with the same claimed rationale of Universal Prosperity.

Consuming at least 500 billion barrels or about 40% of the world’s entire oil reserves in 20 years, through 1980-2000, in fact only kept most poor persons poor. Since 2000, at annual drawdown rate of about 30 billion barrels-per-year, this phenomenal consumption has only enabled a fragile and low-cost imitation of the Old Richworld OECD middle classes to be thrown together in China or India, and elsewhere in the ‘emerging world’. Even today, in China, there are only a few hundred Ferarri, even if numbers of local billionaires are growing quite fast.

World trade in manufactured products and services, driven by highly classic Ricardian comparative advantage has generated fantastic trade deficits and surpluses, the Twin Towers of the Petro Keynesian economy, and has generated the incredible FX reserves of China, as well as Japan, Saudi Arabia, UAE, Russia, Singapore and other present and former stars of the fragile growth bubble. In part fed by these imbalances, today’s inflation fireball hitting China and India, the GCC capital surplus oil exporters, Vietnam, ASEAN countries, Turkey and emerging East Europe will generate social conflict and, in many cases pressing demands for subsidised fuel and food. Later, their export markets can be wiped out, when or if inflation and monetary crisis leads them to sharp defensive revaluation of their moneys against the US dollar, Euro and Yen.

This will do less than nothing to improve the lot of the world’s poor. This, we can remember, is the the claimed headline objective of the Global Growth Economy, and its ‘regrettable’ real world propensity to exhaust global non renewable resources, and many theoretically renewable resources, destroy the environment, and irremediably change the world’s climate in an eyeblink of historical time. Even in the heartlands of New Economy doctrine, and its succeeding clones, poverty remained and remains more than alive and well . The ultimate oil intensive large-economy, the USA uses or mostly wastes around 25 barrels or oil per capita each year (world average 4.8 barrels/capita, 2007), but manages to achieve and maintain mass poverty in large swaths of its population. Entire sections of major cities in the USA are reserved for the poor and very poor, often at the 1 meal-a-day ‘threshold’ for shifting to Emerging Economy status, like large proportions of China’s or India’s populations from the mid-1990s.

Whatever the current price of oil, coal, soybeans, copper, tin, palm oil, rice, natural gas or wheat – at least for a short period of time forward from mid 2008 - the existing de facto model set by the Old Rich OECD countries and aimed at attaining, then maintaining the consumption of vast quantities of every conceivable natural resource is getting very near the end of its useful shelf life. For sure and certain, the ‘quantitiatve model’ of progress is now sometimes called out-dated and irrelevant by well-fed elite thinkers in the OECD ‘knowledge based’ societies, but as G-8 finance ministers in Osaka, Japan, in early July 2008 made it very clear, their main hang-up is getting more petroleum, quick and cheap. The “sagacious society” where ‘qualitative progress’ is the basic aim is good for TV talkshows, but it surely has thermodrynamic energy limits on its progression in the minds of deciders!

The current global finance and banking crisis, rampant inflation in the Emerging Economies, and increasing inflation in the OECD countries - an unsurprising result of faltering Petro Keynesian Growth - are possible harbingers of a quantum shift in economic and social goals. One or more grave geopolitical events, such as armed insurgency in Tibet, or sequels of the US bailing out of Iraq in early 2009, intensified confrontation with Iran due to its nuclear ambitions, Israel-Palestine conflict, and many other scenarios could trigger a sequence spelling a speedy end to the Petro Keyesian growth surge. One clear indicator of this would be a sharp drop, or collapse of world trade growth, signalling an imminent hard landing for the world economy.

What Happens Next

To some, perhaps, the Petro Keynesian model was a great idea at exactly the right time. It was perhaps even fun to destroy’s the world’s stock of lower-cost natural resources in a growth binge lasting only a few years, during which this successor to the New Economy delivered textbook quantitative economic growth. But universal prosperity was surely not one of its achievements, and a world of depleted natural resources and natural resources production capacity are its real sequels. Succeeding generations will have to patch together, then manage the suboptimal, depleted leftovers for the rest of time. The adjustment interval between the two models, from Petro Keynesian growth to a necessarily sustainable ‘distributed poverty’ model may be very short – and could be very violent.

Since late 2007 and only in part due to the ‘subprime’ crisis, which is now mutating further, from a liquidity crisis to something like a world solvency crisis, it is now unfortunately possible to set out credible worst-case scenarios for the world economy.

Natural resource shortage is surely one strand of this, in part due to the somber heritage of the New Economy model collapsing, or mutating into the Petro Keynesian model. Any example of Old Rich OECD per capita energy and resource demand is extreme, and the numbers for this extreme dependence are well known, for example average national Ecological Footprints.
With oil moving towards 150 US dollars-per-barrel, gold towards 1000 US dollars-per-ounce, the base metals off their 2007 highs, to be sure – the US economy is in ‘soft recession’ ! – but still an awful lot more expensive than in the 1990s, and agrocommodities still exploding in price, it is more than easy to laugh at those old and pathetic New Economy certitudes of the fast-receding 1990s. It is just as easy to ignore the warning signs of complete financial and economic meltdown that extreme resource and energy prices, roaring inflation, and out-to-lunch management of the global economy signal, when brought together.

As the critical depleting energy resource, whose price has run far out of hand in just a few years of growing demand versus stagnant supply, oil has taken the bulk of attention but there are a phalanx of other limited and strained natural resources. All are brought to crisis by a process where demand is growing at vintage rates, but supply is lagging far behind, and is often easy to characterise as having a completely opaque and somber outlook.

Keynesian growth of the 1950s and 1960s was a runaway success in the Old Rich OECD countries, then in their postwar bloom of reconstruction. Using tax-and-spend the process transferred wealth from higher-income groups, to the eager-to-spend less wealthy and poor, with Big Government operating the process and – when the machine began to falter – using government borrowing, and money depreciation to work the flagging miracle. The Oil Shocks of the 1970s dealt a heavy blow to the process, because external players – the OPEC oil exporters – invited themselves along to the party of North-South wealth transfer.

This OPEC-led wealth transfer was, we can note, the effective model for current Petro Keynesian growth, now including and covering every possible natural resource. We can, if we like, regard the New Economics interval, and its mostly-irrational, even hysterical Reaganomics and Thatcheromics as a rearguard attempt to turn back the tide. Ironically perhaps, this model easily mutated into Petro Keynesianism, featuring economic globalization and world trade growth, which in fact has in no way preserved wealth in the Old Rich countries, while the devastating drawdown of global natural resource stocks, and pitiless environment damage of this ‘quantitatve growth model’ will surely impoverish the adepts of quantitative progress and No Alternative economic doctrine, in the Emerging Economies.

No Limits ?

One direct sequel of the New Economy attempt to turn back the tide of economic history is the stunning result that ever rising prices of energy, mineral, metal and bioresources does not rapidly and surely produce or yield higher supply. In some cases and even worse, the direct result is the exact reverse. Supply stagnates, or falls as prices explode, and the process continues as prices run out of hand. The case examples are very easy to give, the evidence is massive, both in non renewable, and theoretically renewable asset classes.

This hangover from New Economics is another real threat to the global economy. World inflation is now powerfully supported by food price growth, the world finance and banking sector is now in crisis with a net fall in new financing, and the bank sector has an emerging solvency problem. IMF estimates of the world economic impact of the US-origin subprime crisis, which are rather surely underestimates, already extend to around 945 billion USD, about 1.5 times the value of OPEC’s total revenues in 2006, but about two-thirds revenues in 2008. The inflationary menace of limited or zero supply side response to exploding commodity prices, in a context of vast and fast-growing FX reserves in growth-hungry, large population countries can be easily appreciated and understood.

During the 1985-2000 heyday of New Economics, to be sure, real resource prices fell to bargain basement firesale lows, but supply conrtinued to stolidly increase, as suppliers appeared to have a death wish. For totally unrepeatable reasons, there really were producers of then-sunset resources like Gold and Oil, who could and did increase supply as prices continuously fell. That feast of cheap resources existed, New Economists though it was a permanent change of civilization, but the feast was short-lived.

Current energy and resource-intensive Petro Keynesian Growth of the global economy took over, at latest from 2000-2005, generating almost unlimited or ‘open-ended’ demand growth for fossil energy and mineral resources, and similar demand growth of food and agrocommodities, whose total supply is infrastructure, energy, climate and resource-constrained. These facts are increasingly hard to deny, and their real economy impacts on the real world now include the potential for an almost 1929-style global economic and financial meltdown.

On the demand side, the worst-possible scenario – demand growth increasing as prices rise - mirrors what has happened on the supply side – supply stagnating or shrinking as prices rise. This simple message has taken more than 5 years to get through to economic and political decision makers. Rising prices, in the Petro Keynesian growth model, do not weaken demand – until and unless some ‘threshold’ or ‘ceiling price’ is reached and held. For oil, the countdown is now quite fast, the real pain threshold may be above 150 USD/bbl, after which there can be conventional economic textbook and school manual price elasticity, that is falling demand with rising price. In fact, financial and economic collapse is the most likely and credible result, simply because the pain ceilings were pushed so high by Petro Keynesian growth.

This worst-case scenario on the demand side applied and applies not only to oil, but also to every base metal, precious metals, iron ore, bauxite, mineral fertilizers and cement, and now to all the Agro-commodities. Since 2005, with sometimes all-time inflation-adjusted price peaks attained in the Commodities sphere, demand has tended to stay rock steady, and often growing at ‘vintage’ rates.

Adjustment Scenarios and Radical Change of Values

In the same way that Peak Oil has ceased to be a ‘far out notion’ over recent years, in the same way that climate change has become a lot more than ‘credible’ over the last 5 – 10 years, continued and radical asset value change is sure and certain. Linkage between upstream commodity prices, and downstream equity values, as for previous and similar price growth in the energy and mineral commodities sector, can now be replicated in agro-commodities, that is initial close linkage becoming weaker, then disappearing as financial and economic crisis takes the driver’s seat.

Worldwide financial asset fragility since Summer 2007 is the key symptom of accumulated stress, and cause of future crisis. Asset fragility, and world inflation growing in almost direct proportion to falls in economic growth rates by region, may in fact trigger a much stronger recessionary interval than the current ‘consensus model’ of shallow recession in the US and Europe, and limited trimming-back of growth rates in Asia and the Emerging Economies. If this happened, Peak Oil would be headed-off for a couple of years, but not much more. Base metals, and the precious metals could fall somewhat in price, some agrocommodities would take quite big price hits, giving some ‘breathing space’ for the world economy, but collateral economic and financial damage would spiral.

To be sure, we are not likely in presence of any oil price collapse. Today, oil at 100 USD-per-barrel would be a gift, and this also applies to related prices for other minerals and energy commodities, and the agro-commodities. This being the case, the ‘high gain positive feedback’ set by high oil and energy prices driving non-oil commodity prices and increasing revenues to low income exporter countries, which then drives world economic and trade growth, the Petro Keynesian Growth process, is likely facing severe limits on its lifetime, being nothing if not ‘quantitative progress’. The depth and intensity of the liquidity-solvency crisis, and related whole-sector finance crisis will determine the actual profile for the ‘recession slope’ hitting the OECD group.

Sustainable Resource Transition of the OECD Economy

In an easily measurable timeframe of no more than 2 or 3 years from now, by 2011 or 2012, OECD decision makers will have to ‘bite the bullet’ and accept, firstly, that Energy Transition is a serious, real-world challenge to the survival of their economies and societies. Cheap Oil has totally disappeared already, and will never return. Other fossil energy resources are in catch-up phases of price growth, spilling over to the whole resource complex. Cheap food and agroresources have gone the same way as cheap energy, and any respite due to a ‘short sharp cut’ in global economic growth is relatively unlikely, and extreme high risk for any apprentice sorceror wanting to bring it on.The multiple implications of this are treated by myself and various contributors to my book ‘The Final Energy Crisis’ (Pluto Books 2005 and 2008, ISBN 0745320929). They range from the economy, transport, food supply and habitat through to cultural values and how society deals with a radically changing future.

Models for change away from fossil fuel burning exist, including the Kyoto Treaty and possible transition programmes based on the IMF framework for Special Drawing Rights, for member countries confronted by short-term financial and budget crisis. The SDRs, as we know, are based on a complex formula including the member country’s size, economic conditions, and previous performance. On a directly comparable base, « Oil Drawing Rights » and « Natural Gas Drawing Rights » could be set and allocated, with oil and later natural gas removed from conventional market trading, and national consumption rates decided by an international secretariat holding all the powers needed to carry out its functions. In brief, the basic need to reduce energy intensity will become, or has become clear and this will entrain the creation of many new enterprises and activities not concerned with supply, but with energy demand.

The objective would be to achieve large cuts in oil and natural gas intensity, measured in barrels/capita/year, and boe/capita/year, in a short period of time. The timeframe, in fact, is shrinking as we move into full Peak Oil, with Peak Gas coming fast behind. Outline targets for demand compression, depending on country and the depletion rates accepted by oil and gas producer countries, could be as high as 5% or 6% per year, perhaps more, and would apply on a long-term or in fact ‘permanent’ basis.

The investment and revenue implications of International Energy Transition extending or replacing current and ineffective Kyoto Treaty attempts to achieve a shift from fossil to renewable energy, basically through supply-only measures, can be imagined. Some analyses of even limited Energy Transition in the OECD countries, published by McKinsey & Co and aimed at cutting oil intensity about 30% by 2020 generate very large spending forecasts, but with each year that Energy Transition is set back, needed spending will increase.

More important is that energy transition will be only one part of transition to the sustainable economy. This will require a system-wide reduction of resource intensity, rather than increased recycling and production of resources at lower unit energy intensity and lower unit environment impacts. The process will have to start in the OECD countries, indicating we have some way to go before this need is clear enough, accepted widely enough, before action starts – and time is short.

© 2008 Andrew McKillop

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Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Garrett Hardin on what causes catastrophes..... It is never overpopulation!

Nobody Ever Dies of overpopulation
Posted by: "Abernethy, Virginia Deane" virginia.abernethy@Vanderbilt.Edu
Date: Wed Sep 10, 2008 4:40 pm ((PDT))

Dr. Garrett Hardin's classic paper, written in the aftermath of a cyclone that killed thousands in Bangladesh, was published as an Editorial in Science, February 12, 1971 [Vol. 171, # 3971].

Dr. Hardin opposed mass immigration and was a founder of Population-Environment Balance. He designed its logo. Papers from a festchrift in his honor were published in the academic journal Population and Environment in Spring, 1991.

Several years ago, becoming unable to care for themselves and members of the Hemlock Society, Dr. Hardin and his wife acted on their joint suicide pact. They are survived by their children and grandchildren.

Nobody Ever Dies of Overpopulation

By Garrett Hardin (in Science, Feb 12, 1971)

Those of us who are deeply concerned about population and the environment -

"econuts," we're called, - are accused of seeing herbicides in trees, pollution in running brooks, radiation in rocks, and overpopulation everywhere. There is merit in the accusation.

I was in Calcutta when the cyclone struck East Bengal in November 1970. Early dispatches spoke of 15,000 dead, but the estimates rapidly escalated to 2,000,000 and then dropped back to 500,000. A nice round number: it will do as well as any, for we will never


know. The nameless ones who died, "unimportant" people far beyond the fringes of the social power structure, left no trace of their existence. Pakistani parents repaired the population loss in just 40 days, and the world turned its attention to other matters.1

What killed those unfortunate people? The cyclone, newspapers said. But one can just as logically say that overpopulation killed them.
The Gangetic Delta is barely above sea level.

Every year several thousand people are killed in quite ordinary storms.
If Pakistan were not overcrowded, no sane man would bring his family to such a place.
Ecologically speaking, a delta belongs to the river and the sea; man obtrudes there at his peril.

In the web of life every event has many antecedents. Only by an arbitrary decision can we designate a single antecedent as "cause." Our choice is biased - biased to protect our egos against the onslaught of unwelcome truths. As T.S. Eliot put it in Burnt Norton: Go, go, go, said the bird: human kind Cannot bear very much reality.

Were we to identify overpopulation as the cause of a half-million deaths, we would threaten ourselves with a question to which we do not know the answer:

How can we control population without recourse to repugnant measures? Fearfully we close our minds to an inventory of possibilities.

Instead, we say that a cyclone caused the deaths, thus relieving ourselves of responsibility for this and future catastrophes. "Fate" is so comforting.

Every year we list tuberculosis, leprosy, enteric diseases, or animal parasites as the "cause of death" of millions of people. It is well known that malnutrition is an important antecedent of death in all these categories; and that malnutrition is connected with overpopulation. But overpopulation is not called the cause of death.

We cannot bear the thought.

People are dying now of respiratory diseases in Tokyo, Birmingham, and Gary, because of the "need" for more industry. The "need" for more food justifies overfertilization of the land, leading to eutrophication of the waters, and lessened fish production - which leads to more "need" for food.

What will we say when the power shuts down some fine summer on our eastern seaboard and several thousand people die of heat prostration? Will we blame the weather? Or the power companies for not building enough generators? Or the econuts for insisting on pollution controls?

One thing is certain: we won't blame the deaths on overpopulation. No one ever dies of overpopulation. It is unthinkable.

1 The UN Population Card indicates that the population of Bangladesh has a net gain of 6 persons per minute. Please see the article about the Population Card on page 216.

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Comments from the Energy Resources List : ... On survival plans in Western Australia away from cities

Re: Solar panel payback takes 100 years
Posted by: "Arthur C. Noll" arthurnoll@onemain.com arthurcnoll
Date: Wed Sep 10, 2008 4:32 pm ((PDT))

---
Some thoughts came to mind as I read your post, Mike. I don't know your exact situation so some of them may or may not apply to your situation, but I think there is some general food for thought in them.
You may not have any problem with the quality of your PV power right now, but my point is, as I'm sure you know, that the power inverter and the panels will not last forever, and when they go, you, or the next generation, will have a much harder time replacing them, because more of the fossil fuel needed to make such things, will be gone. I'd rather hand on to the next generation, a lifestyle I have reasonable expectation of working for them.
The power company buys your extra power now, but the question over
the short term (in the long term the power company and grid is gone,
as I see it) is whether the amount of power you generate or buy, is
worth the cost of maintaining your line, maintaining transformers,
switches, all of that. You say you are able to see the grid, I
assume that means you can see a major transmission line, otherwise
the statement makes little sense. If one is connected to the grid,
of course you can see it, or the part you are connected to. Being
able to see a major transmission line doesn't say how close your
connection to it is, though. You could still be miles from the
connection. As costs go up, a town of 2,000 people might not be a
revenue source, or generation source big enough to bother with,
especially if a lot of them end up without money making jobs to pay
electric bills, are generating tiny amounts of power by the power
company standards, and possibly generating that power at times that
are awkward, require storage capacity to really make use of it.
What is the economic foundation of this town? How stable is it?
Those are the questions that determine whether it continues to get
service or not, I think.

Being close to a rail line looks good for staying in touch with
cities, which sounds to me like it could be the economic foundation
of your town. But if true, that is a two edged sword, as is having
reliable electricity, and even though there are potential problems,
your proximity to a major line does make your situation more
reliable. Having what others want, can cause you a lot of trouble,
though, and I'm not talking about roving armed gangs at this point.
When you have what a lot of people want in terms of real estate, the
price goes up and so do taxes. People wanting to live a simple, low
money income life, can find themselves forced to either get back on
the treadmill to make money, or move, by forces like these.

The rail line is something like PV panels, made with fossil fuel, can last many years but not forever. Rail lines do require maintenance, do eventually need complete replacement. And like the electricity, a small town is likely to be cut off for lack of paying customers and increased maintenance costs. If a spur line has problems, they might not feel it was worth fixing, if there isn't a spur line they might not stop there anymore. Whichever way it goes, you can lose your rail transportation. That could be good, actually, to be cut off. The problem I see is that as you describe things, you are close to a lot of other people, and if you succeed with the transition town idea, if you successfully work together and build a permaculture, have food to eat when others don't, you become
a target again. Suddenly the train might start stopping again, economic pressure put on you in the form of taxes...
I understand that people generally want to have it all. They don't
want the nasty aspects of the market, they don't want to be wage
slaves on a virtual treadmill, but they want to stay connected
enough to get some of the things the rest, still on the treadmills,
are pumping out as wage slaves, with the aid of exploiting fossil
fuel and exploiting other resources, too. Ancient human instinct
for good food labor EROEI, to have the output of slaves, the output
of exploitation of resources, and assume that nature takes care of
itself on the sustainability issue, turn a blind eye to social
issues, or turn a ruthless eye on it, perfectly willing to be
ruthless about forcing people. You have managed to find a pleasant
niche in this system for the moment. How long it can last is
another question.

I've understood that camels do quite well in large parts of
western Australia. Where camels can live, humans can live off the
camels. Not many, but a few- and you might completely cut the ties.
As you describe things, though, it sounds like there are some strong
psychological cables binding you to your present situation. Might
not be a lot of choice right now, but as things go on and the market
monster weakens, the chance should come to cut free. If you
continue to insist on dancing with the devil, though, continuing to
try to maintain these links to exploitation, or try to cut loose
while in view of masses of people whose minds are still focused on
exploiting whatever they can, I think there could be a serious
price to pay. As long as you have things that others see as
valuable, and you are in range of those people, they will try to
take what you have. In the money game, they will use economic
forces, if money fails them, you can indeed end up with warlords and
armed gangs. I think this blinkered, selfish, instinctive hunger for
the best food-labor EROEI, without concern for the future, without
concern for social wellbeing, will fail in the end, will die out,
but the process of how it dies can easily take you with it.

Arthur Noll

--------------------------------------------------
In energyresources@yahoogroups.com, "Mike Stasse" <mstasse@...>
wrote:

--- In energyresources@yahoogroups.com, "Arthur C. Noll" <arthurnoll@>
wrote:
> >
> > ---
> > The statement you made that really stuck in my throat, Mike, was
> > that your panels would pay back the embodied energy in them. I
> > don't believe they will ever do that, simply because a lot of
> > that embodied energy was much higher quality energy than what they
> > produce.
>
> Well I have no problem with the quality... It's actually SUPERIOR
> to grid current, as it is formed electronically as a perfect sine
> wave of voltafe never varying much by more than 1 or 2 percent.....
> I know they will never replace the oil and coal that was used to make
> them...
> but oil and coal do not figure in the future I envision anyway...
> >
> >
> > How long will the grid last? <SNIP> The grid in the US was only
> > extended into rural areas with
> > federal subsidies. I imagine similar things happened in
> > Australia
> > and other places. This is likely to reverse. I think it is
likely people like you will stop getting service, or it will be
extremely expensive, something only the very wealthy might pay,
before the grid completely collapses.
>
> Well, I can SEE the grid from here! We're not that rural, living
in a town of ~2000 a mere 20 miles from the coast and half way between
two largish towns. Living 'out west' in Australia is unsustainable and
> WILL disappear, you are right... if for nothing more than lack of
> reliable water.
>
> >
> > I would imagine this problem of expense of long lines, along
with increased cost of transportation, will pull a lot of people out
of rural areas - transportation costs are already pushing people
here away from rural bedroom communities and long commutes.
>
> We don'tcommute, and we are on a rail line..... one of the
criteria for where we would escape...
>
> Greatly increased cost, or unreliable or simply cut off electrical
service will push even more to get out of these places.
>
> If the power went off completely, it would be a bugger, but we
would stay and survive...
>
>
> > People living far
> > away from cities will have to either cut more and more of their
> > ties, find local sources to sustain them, or move closer or back
> > to cities. And ultimately, I think the only answer is to completely
> > cut ties and be far away from cities.
>
> We have started a Transition Town movement here....
>
> Mike.
>
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On-the-record US Army assessment of the Afghan situation in mid-2008

Afghan war trend worse than Iraq: U.S. trainer
By Mark Trevelyan, Security Correspondent
Reuters/ABC News

STOCKHOLM

The tide of the war in Afghanistan is running against the United States and its allies, in contrast to an improving trend in Iraq, a U.S. military official and counter-insurgency expert said on Wednesday.

"Afghanistan (is) in my eyes an under-resourced war, a war that needs a whole lot more advisers, a whole lot more economic aid," Lieutenant Colonel John Nagl told a security conference in Stockholm.

"This war is the war I'm concerned about, a war in which the United States very much needs the help of our friends."

Nagl commands the 1st battalion of the 34th armored regiment at Fort Riley, Kansas, training U.S. transition teams that embed with Iraqi and Afghan security forces.

He was part of the writing team that produced the U.S. military's manual on counter-insurgency, which is credited with transforming its approach to both conflicts with a new emphasis on winning over local populations and marginalizing insurgents.

Speaking to reporters, he drew a sharp contrast between developments in the two countries.

"My analysis is that al Qaeda in Iraq has essentially been defeated. That doesn't mean they can't come back but they really played their cards enormously poorly, I think," Nagl said.

He said the turning of Sunni tribal leaders against al Qaeda, and the merging of their militia into government security forces, were important signs of progress.

MOMENTUM MATTERS

"The trends are moving in our direction, and momentum matters in a counter-insurgency campaign because it's ultimately a struggle for the support of the people and the people can sense which way the tide is going," Nagl said.

In Afghanistan, he said, "the trends are not in the right direction. The number of suicide attacks was up dramatically in 2007, 2007 was a record year for opium production (which) obviously funds the larger Pashto-based insurgency."

Afghanistan has faced rising violence in the past two years, the bloodiest period since U.S.-led and Afghan forces overthrew the Taliban government in late 2001.

Washington is pressing reluctant European allies to do more to help combat a resurgent Taliban in the more volatile south and east of the country, an issue expected to loom large at NATO's April 2-4 summit in Bucharest. More than 50,000 foreign troops are stationed in Afghanistan, but the United States alone has more than three times that number in Iraq.

Nagl listed a catalogue of challenges in Afghanistan, including its harsh climate and terrain, its lack of centralized government in the past 30 years, the destruction of roads and other basic infrastructure, and the state of its army.

"I've worked with the Afghan security forces a little bit. I find them to be diligent and dedicated and trainable (but) not particularly well educated ... The Iraqi security forces are far more advanced than are the Afghans," he said.

"The Taliban did extraordinarily harmful things to the intelligentsia of the country. The people you need to run a country no longer exist."

(Editing by Myra MacDonald)

Copyright 2008 Reuters News Service. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Henry CK Liu debates with Tom Friedman on the appropriate price of Oil

Rising Oil Prices and the Falling Dollar

Henry C.K. Liu


This article appeared in AToL as Flat-Earther Blind to Oil Facts on June 28, 2008 [See below for URL]

Celebrated New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman, a flat-earthling, in a provocative polemic (Mr. Bush, Lead or Leave, June 22, 2008) accused the president of the United States of being the nation's addict-in-chief to oil with "a massive, fraudulent, pathetic excuse for an energy policy." He described the president's strategy as getting "Saudi Arabia, our chief oil pusher, to up our dosage for a little while and bring down the oil price just enough so the renewable energy alternatives can't totally take off. Then try to strong arm Congress into lifting the ban on drilling offshore and in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge."

Friedman admits that "we're going to need oil for years to come." But he said that for geopolitical reasons he prefers the US getting as much oil as possible from domestic wells. He also admits that "our future is not in oil." He wants the president to tell the country an allegedly much larger truth: "Oil is poisoning our climate and our geopolitics, and here is how we're going to break our addiction: We're going to set a floor price of $4.50 a gallon for gasoline and $100 a barrel for oil. And that floor price is going to trigger massive investments in renewable energy — particularly wind, solar panels and solar thermal. And we're also going to go on a crash program to dramatically increase energy efficiency, to drive conservation to a whole new level and to build more nuclear power. And I want every Democrat and every Republican to join me in this endeavor."

Friedman talks as if he wants the president to be an autocratic dictator. Does Friedman not know that with $4.50 gas and $100 oil, a large number of working people will not be able to make ends meet with their current income, or retirees on social security will not be able to heat their homes this winter? Airlines and other transportation companies would face bankruptcy? Does he not know that in a democracy, sustained $100 oil translates into a serious political problem? The oil problem does not lend itself to simplistic solutions. Yet that is precisely what our flat-earthling proposes.

Even multinational corporations are being forced to raise prices to ward off losses from high energy costs. For example, Dow Chemical (NYSE: DOW) has just announced it will raise the price of its products by as much as an additional 25% in July, on top of the 20% increase in June, in an effort to offset the continuing relentless rise in the cost of energy and hydrocarbon feed stocks. The Company also will implement a freight surcharge of $300 per shipment by truck and $600 per shipment by rail, effective August 1, 2008.

Furthermore, Dow is temporarily idling and reducing production at a number of manufacturing plants, having reduced its ethylene oxide production worldwide by 25%, and idled 30% of its North America acrylic acid production. Dow also will idle 40% of its European styrene production capacity, and has reduced its European polystyrene production rate by 15%. In light of a sharp decline in auto sales, Dow's Automotive unit is announcing a series of cost reduction measures covering facilities, people and external spending, divesting its paint shop sealer business and is implementing plant consolidations resulting in the closure of three production units. In addition, Dow Building Solutions temporarily idled 20% of its European capacity for producing STYROFOAM insulation. Earlier this month, Dow announced plans to idle three Dow Emulsion Polymers plants representing 25% of North America capacity and 10% of European capacity related to declines in the housing and consumer sectors, as well as rising costs.

Andrew N. Liveris, Dow chairman and CEO, described the steps as "extremely unwelcome but entirely unavoidable" as the global cost of oil, natural gas and hydrocarbon derivatives surge ever higher, despite company efforts to improve energy efficiency by 22% from 1995 to 2005, and to target another 25% by 2015, to cut costs significantly, and with an array of efforts around alternative energy and alternative feed-stocks. Over the past five years, Dow's bill for hydrocarbon feed stocks and energy has surged four-fold, from $8 billion in 2002 to an estimated $32 billion-plus this year.

General Motors announced plans to close four plants manufacturing trucks and SUVS, citing decreased sales of large vehicles in the wake of rising fuel prices. Ford took similar actions. Yet about 65% of oil consumption is related to transportation, a sector where alternative fuel technology is relatively easy to tackle, with alternatives such as electric and substitute fuel engines.

In China, steelmakers were forced to agree to a record increase in annual iron ore prices in a move likely to boost the cost of cars, machinery and other products globally. Chinese millers agreed to pay Anglo-Australian miner Rio Tinto up to 96.5% more for their ore supplies this year, the largest ever annual increase and ten folds the 9.5% increase paid in 2007, surpassing the record increase of 71.5% in 2005 when the commodities boom began to gather pace. The development fuels fears that global commodity-led inflation will continue. Anglo-Australian BHP Billiton, the world's largest primary resources company, said the 96.5% record increase in iron ore cost announced by Rio Tinto was not enough, signaling it could ask for a rise above 100% with its steelmaker customers.

In South Korea, Pohang Iron and Steel Company (Posco), the third largest steel producer in the world, increased prices by up to 21%, taking the cumulative price inflation to about 60%. German steelmaking giant Salzgitter A.G, successor company of Reichswerke Hermann Göring of the Third Reich, also said it would raise prices by 20%.

In my May 26, 2005 article in Asia Times on Line: The Real Problem with $50 Oil, I laid out the economics and geopolitics of oil. The main points are updated below to show the impact of a $100 floor for oil as proposed by Friedman.

It is unfair of Friedman to label Saudi Arabia as "our chief oil pusher". Since Arabs are also Semites, one is tempted to point out that Friedman opens himself to accusations of anti-Semitism when he picks on Saudi Arabia unfairly.

The world's oil problem began in 1973 when OPEC, having formed in 1960, emerged as an effective cartel after the Arab oil embargo against the US, Western Europe and Japan for supporting Israel in the Yom Kippur War. The embargo started on October 19, 1973, and ended on March 18, 1974. During that six-month period, the price for benchmark Saudi Light increased from $2.59 in September 1973 to $11.65 in March 1974. Since then, OPEC has been setting bottom benchmark prices for its various kinds of crude oil in the world market, with Saudi Arabia as swing producer to increase or decrease supply to stabilize prices. To keep oil price at the $100 floor proposed by Friedman, the cooperation of Saudi Arabia is needed to reduce production whenever oil price drops below the $100 floor. By that standard, Saudi Arabia can hardly be called a "chief oil pusher".

By 1984, the effects of a decade of higher oil prices had affected US demand in the form of better insulated homes and more energy-efficient industrial processes, and in substantial improvement in automobile fuel efficiency, not to mention new competitive use of cleaner coal, wind and solar and other alternatives. At the same time, crude-oil production was increasing throughout the world, stimulated by higher prices. During this period, OPEC total production stayed relatively constant, around 30 million barrels per day. However, OPEC's market share was decreased from more than 50% in 1974 to 47% in 1979. The OPEC loss of market share was caused by non-OPEC production increases in the rest of the world. Higher crude prices caused by OPEC production sacrifices had made exploration more profitable for everyone, not just OPEC, and many non-OPEC producers around the world rushed to take advantage of it, including the US.

Global demand for oil had peaked by 1979 and it became clear that the only way for OPEC to maintain prices was to reduce production further to compensate for the high production of non-OPEC producers. OPEC reduced its total production by a third during the first half of the 1980s. As a result, the cartel's share in world oil production dropped below 30%. Non-OPEC producers, including the US, got a big lift from higher prices, larger market shares, and an expanded definition of proven reserves which expanded as oil prices rose.

After two decades of high prices, oil dipped below $10 per barrel after the Asian financial crisis of 1997 as demand fell when the global economy stalled. After oil prices peaked above US$58 a barrel in early April, 2005, the White House announced that it wanted oil to go back down to $25 a barrel. When oil rises above $50 a barrel and stays there for an extended period, the resultant changes in the economy become normalized facts. These changes go way beyond fluctuations in the price of oil to produce a very different economy. I listed in 2005 ten new economic facts created by $50 oil. I now adjust these facts for $100 oil as proposed by Friedman to see if his proposal makes sense. The key fact is that while $100 oil may stimulate development of alternative energy modes, such development cannot be expected to bring oil price back down, or the stimulated alternative energy sector will go bankrupt. While there is no known solution to the oil problem that will lead to lower oil prices short of a global recession, $100 oil is not without problems.

Fact 1: Oil-related transactions involving the same material quantity involve greater cash flow, with each barrel of oil generating $100 instead of $25. The United States consumed in 2007 about 22 million barrels of oil each day, about 25% of world consumption of 87 million barrels. China consumes 7.3 million barrels per day. Yet daily world production is only about 85 million barrels, leaving a deficit of 2 million barrels which are being made up from inventory. This fact is the fundamental reason why oil prices have risen. It can be expected that production will increase as a result of high prices to remove the supply deficit. US consumption has been fairly constant in the past few years. About 10.2 million barrels were imports and only 5.5 million barrels from OPEC. At $100 a barrel, the aggregate oil bill for the US comes to $2 billion a day, $730 billion a year, about 5.6% of 2007 US gross domestic product (GDP). About 50% of US consumption is imported at a cost of $1 billion a day, or $365 billion a year. Oil and gas import is the single largest component in the US trade deficit, not imports from Japan or China.

As oil prices rise, consumers pay more for heating oil and gasoline, truckers pay more for diesel, airlines pay more for jet fuel, utility companies pay more for fuel as coal price rose with oil prices, petrochemical companies pay more for raw material, and the whole economy pays more for electricity. Now those extra payments do not disappear into a black hole in the universe. They go into someone's pocket as revenue and translate into profits for some businesses and losses for others. In other words, higher energy prices do not take money out of the economy, they merely shift profit allocation from one business sector to another. More than $365 billion a year goes to foreign oil producers who then must recycle their oil dollars back into US Treasury bonds or other dollar assets, as part of the rules of the game of dollar hegemony. The simple fact is that a rise in monetary value of assets adds to the monetary wealth of the economy.

Fact 2: Since energy is a basic commodity and oil is a predominant energy source, high energy cost translates into a high cost of living, which can result in a lower standard of living unless income can keep up. High energy cost translates into reduced consumption in other sectors unless higher income can be generated from the increased cash flow. Unfortunately, pay raises typically have a long time lag behind price increases. Higher prices translate into higher aggregate revenue for the economy and explain why corporate profit is up even when consumer discretionary spending slows. A large part of the oil problem comes from the fact that higher corporate revenue from rising prices has failed to translate into higher wages.

Fact 3: As cash flow increases for the same amount of material activities, the GDP rises while the economy stagnates from wage depreciation. Companies are buying and selling the same amount or maybe even less, but at a higher price and profit margin and with employees at lower pay per unit of revenue. As oil price rose within a decade from about $10 a barrel to $150, a 15-fold increase, those who owned oil reserves see their asset value increase also 15 folds. Those who do not own oil reserves protect themselves with hedges in the rapidly expanding structured finance world. Since GDP is a generally accepted measure of economic health, the US economy then is judged to be growing at a very acceptable rate while running in place or even backwards. There is an expanding oil bubble, albeit smaller than the recently collapsed housing bubble, if one understands that a bubble is defined as a price regime that has risen beyond an economy's ability to sustain it with compensatory income from wages.

Fact 4: With asset value ballooning from the impact of a sharp rise in energy prices, which in turn leads the entire commodity-led price chain in an upward spiral, the economy can carry more debt without increasing its debt-to-equity ratio, giving much-craved support to the residual debt bubble that began to burst before oil prices began to rise. Since the monetary value of assets tends to rise in tandem over time, the net effect is a de facto depreciation of money, misidentified as growth.

Fact 5: High oil prices threaten the economic viability of some commercial sectors, such as airlines, trucking and motor vehicles, which have exhausted their price elasticity. These sectors cannot pass on increased cost without causing their sales volume to fall. Detroit, namely Ford and General Motors, with their most profitable models being the gas-guzzling trucks and sport utility vehicles (SUVs) that can now take more than $300 to fill their tanks, are going down the same distress route as their under-funded pension obligations.

Fact 6: Industrial plastics, the materials most in demand in modern manufacturing, more than steel or cement, are all derived from oil. Higher prices of industrial plastics will mean lower wages for workers who assemble them into products. But even steel and cement require energy to produce and their prices will also go up along with oil prices. While low Asian wages are keeping global inflation in check through cross-border wage arbitrage, rising energy prices are the unrelenting factor behind global inflation that no interest-rate policy from any central bank can contain. Ironically, from a central bank's perspective, a commodity-led asset appreciation, which central banks do not define as inflation, is the best cure for a debt bubble that the central banks themselves created with their loose money policies. Since most assets are exponentially larger than the rate of consumption, the wealth effect of higher asset value can neutralize the rise in consumer prices. This is the key reason why central banks are not sensitive to the need to keep wages rising. The monetary system is structured to work against wage earners who do not own substantial assets.

Fact 7: War-making is a gluttonous oil consumer. With high oil prices, America's wars will carry a higher price, which will either lead to a higher federal budget deficit, or lower social spending, or both. This translates into rising dollar interest rates, which is structurally recessionary for the globalized economy operating under dollar hegemony. But while war is relentlessly inflationary, war spending is an economic stimulant, at least as long as collateral damage from war occurs only on foreign soil. War profits are always good for business, and the need for soldiers reduces unemployment. Fighting for oil faces little popular opposition at home, even though for the United States the need for oil is not a credible justification for war. The fact of the matter is that the US already controls most of the world's oil without war, by virtue of oil being denominated in dollars that the US can print at will with little penalty. Petro-war is launched to protect dollar hegemony which requires oil to be denominated in dollars, not physical access to oil. Much anti-war posturing in an election year is merely campaign rhetoric. Military solutions to geopolitical problems arising from political economy will remain operative options for the US regardless who happens to be the occupant of the White House, populist or not.

Fact 8: There is a supply/demand myth that if oil prices rise, they will attract more exploration for new oil, which will bring prices back down in time. This was true in the good old days when oil in the ground stayed a dormant financial asset. But now, as explained by Facts 3 and 4 above, in a debt bubble, oil in the ground can be more valuable than oil above ground because it can serve as a monetizable asset of rising value through asset-backed securities (ABS) in the wild, wild world of structured finance (derivatives). So while there is incentive to find more oil reserves to enlarge the asset base, there is little incentive to pump it out of the ground merely to keep prices low.

Gasoline prices also will not come down, not because there is a shortage of crude oil, but because there is a shortage of refinery capacity. The refinery deficiency is created by the appearance of gas-guzzlers that Detroit pushed on the consuming public when gasoline at less than a $1 a gallon was cheaper than bottled water. Refineries are among the most capital-intensive investments, with nightmarish regulatory hurdles. Refineries need to be located where the demand for gasoline is, but families that own three cars do not want to live near a refinery. Thus there is no incentive to expand refinery capacity to bring gasoline prices down because the return on new investment will need high gasoline prices to pay for it. After all, as Friedman tirelessly reminds us, the market is not a charity organization for the promotion of human welfare. It is a place where investors try to get the highest price for products to repay their investment with highest profit. It is not the nature of the market to reduce the price of output from investment so that consumers can drive gas-guzzling SUVs that burn most of their fuel sitting in traffic jams on freeways.

Fact 9: According to the US Geological Survey, the Middle East has only half to one-third of known world oil reserves. There is a large supply of oil elsewhere in the world that would be available at higher but still economically viable prices. The idea that only the Middle East has the key to the world's energy future is flawed and is geopolitically hazardous.

The United States has large proven oil reserves that get larger with rising oil price. Proven reserves of oil are generally taken to be those quantities that geological and engineering information indicates with reasonable certainty can be recovered in the future from known reservoirs under existing economic and geological conditions. According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), the US had 21.8 billion barrels of proven oil reserves as of January 1, 2001, twelfth-highest in the world, when oil price was around $20 per barrel. These reserves are concentrated overwhelmingly (more than 80%) in four states - Texas (25%, including the state's reserves in the Gulf of Mexico), Alaska (24%), California (21%), and Louisiana (14%, including the state's reserves in the Gulf of Mexico).

US proven oil reserves had declined by about 20% since 1990, with the largest single-year decline (1.6 billion barrels) occurring in 1991. But this was due mostly to the falling price of oil, which shrank proven reserves by definition. At $100 a barrel, the reserve numbers can be expected to expand greatly. The reason the US imports oil is that importing is cheaper and cleaner than extracting domestic oil. At a certain price level, the US may find it more economic to develop more domestic oil instead of importing, but the formula depends more on price gap between import and domestic oil which in a global market is not expected to stay wide for long. The idea of achieving oil independence as a strategy for cheap oil is unworthy of serious discussion.

The economics of petroleum is as important as geology in coming up with reserve estimates since a proven reserve is one that can be developed economically. But it is important to remember that political economy extends beyond the supply and demand fixation of market fundamentalists. If the Middle East and the Persian Gulf implode geopolitically and oil from this region stops flowing, the US, as an oil producer will be a main beneficiary of $50 oil, or $100 oil, or even $1,000 oil, as would Britain with its North Sea oil and countries such as Norway, Indonesia, Nigeria and Venezuela. But the biggest winner will be Russia. For China, it would be a wash, because China currently imports energy not for domestic consumption, but to fuel its growing export machine, and can pass on the added cost to foreign buyers. In fact, the likelihood of the US bartering below-market Texas crude for low-cost Chinese manufactured goods is very real possibility in the future. Similar bilateral arrangements between China-Russia, China-Middle East/Gulf, China-Nigeria, China-Venezuela and China-Indonesia are also good prospects. Also, China's off-shore reserves have so far stayed largely undeveloped.

Fact 10: Fifty dollar oil bought the US debt bubble a little more time, but bubbles never last forever and it burst in August 2007. But in a democracy, the White House in 2005 was under pressure from a misinformed public to bring the oil price back down to $25, not realizing that the price for cheap oil could accelerate the bursting of the debt bubble. Despite all the grandstand warnings about the need to reduce the US trade deficit, a case can be made with ease that the United States cannot drastically reduce its trade deficit without paying the price of a sharp recession that could trigger a global depression.

The Economics of Oil

Since the discovery of petroleum, its economics has never been about cutting a square deal for the consumer, corporate or individual, let alone the little guys or the working poor. It has to do with squeezing the most financial value out of this black gold.

John D Rockefeller consolidated the US oil industry into a monopoly by eliminating chaotic competition to keep the price high, not to push prices down. Neo-classical economics views higher prices of consumables as inflation, but asset appreciation is viewed as growth, not inflation. Since oil is both an asset and a consumable commodity, neo-classical economics faces a dilemma in oil economics. The size of oil reserves is exponentially greater than the annual flow of oil to the market. What is even more fundamental is that as the flow of oil to the market decreases, the price of oil goes up, enlarging proven reserves by definition. Thus while a rise in the market price of oil adds to inflation, the corresponding rise of the asset value and size of oil reserves create a wealth effect that more than neutralizes the inflationary impact of market oil prices. The world should not care about an few added percentage points in inflation if the world's assets would appreciate 100% as a result, except that when oil is not owned equally among the world's population, a conflict emerges between consumers and producers, making oil a domestic political and geopolitical problem.

In fact, on an aggregate basis, cheap oil can have a deflationary impact on the economy by reducing the wealth effect of all assets. For the US economy, since the United States is a major possessor of oil assets, both on- and off-shore, high oil prices are in the national interest. What we have is not an inflation problem in rising oil prices, but a pricing problem that distributes unevenly the benefits and pains of price adjustments among oil owners and oil consumers, both domestically and internationally. This is a political problem. Politicians are under populist pressure to keep oil prices low when the solution is to equalize the benefits and pain of high oil prices.
Oil Price and Monetary Policy

Failure by the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to cut production at its meeting in November 1998 prompted prices to collapse to a 12-year low of $10.35 a barrel in New York the following month. A combination of excess production, rising inventories and poor demand for winter heating fuels pushed prices down. In March 1999, oil prices climbed 17%, going higher as oil-producing countries, unified by low prices, succeed in cutting output. Oil prices began making a sharp recovery in the late winter of 1999, rising from the low teens at the beginning of the year to more than $22 a barrel by the early autumn, and crossed $30 a barrel in mid-February 2000. A major cause was production cuts settled upon in March 1999 by OPEC and other major oil-exporting nations.

On March 12, 1999, St Louis Federal Reserve Bank president William Poole said in a speech that the growth of the US money supply, which was then at more than 8% when inflation was below 2% annually, was "a source of concern" because it outpaced the rate of inflation. The M2 money supply had been growing at an 8.6% annual rate for the previous 52 weeks to keep the economy from stalling before the 2000 election. The US Federal Reserve was also watching the rate of inflation, held down mostly by low oil prices.

Poole warned that "we cannot continue to rely on the decline of oil prices at the [low] pace of the last couple of years." He said investors who had pushed bond yields to their highest level in six months were correct in assuming the Fed's next move would be to increase interest rates. The Fed Open Market Committee (FOMC), when it met on February 2, 1999, had left the Fed Funds rate (FFR) target unchanged at 4.75%. Poole voted in 1998 for the FOMC to cut the FFR target three times between September and November to 4.75% when oil was at $12.

Today, with oil at around $135, the FFR target is 2% effective since April 30, 2008. On June 25, the Fed opted for keeping the Fed funds rate target unchanged. In its statement, the Fed Open Market Committee (FOMC) said: "Tight credit conditions, the ongoing housing contraction, and the rise in energy prices are likely to weigh on economic growth over the next few quarters."

Annualized growth rate for M2 in Q4 2007 was 6.8%, with a Fed funds rate target of 2%, as compared with the 1999 M2 growth rate of 8.6% against a Fed funds rate target of 4.75% in response to fallouts from the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis. However, in the past seven quarters before end of 2007, V2 (the velocity of M2) declined by 2.3% annum rate, causing GDP growth to decelerate from 3.5% to 2.2%. GDP growth for Q1 2008 was 0.6% which justified a 2% Fed funds rate target.

Yet if the Fed is really concerned with fighting inflation expectation, $135 oil and 2% Fed funds rate target simply do not mix, even with a falling money-supply growth rate. There is strong evidence that instead of worrying about inflation expectation, the Fed is really more worried about the economic debris from the burst debt bubble, which stealth inflation through asset appreciation is expected to help clean up with less pain. If high oil prices are the handiwork of speculators, the Fed is the speculator-in-chief. But there is very little speculation in the oil market because hedging is not speculation as all competent market analysts know. The rise in oil price is the direct result of a debasement of money coordinated by the world's central banks led by the Fed.

In July 1993, when the US economy had been growing for more than two years from M2 growth of over 6%, Fed chairman Alan Greenspan remarked in congressional testimony that "if the historical relationships between M2 and nominal income had remained intact, the behavior of M2 in recent years would have been consistent with an economy in severe contraction." With the M2 growth rate down to 1.44% in July 1993, Greenspan said, "The historical relationships between money and income, and between money and the price level, have largely broken down, depriving the aggregates of much of their usefulness as guides to policy. At least for the time being, M2 has been downgraded as a reliable indicator of financial conditions in the economy, and no single variable has yet been identified to take its place."

Yet M2, adjusted for changes in the price level, remains a component of the Index of Leading Economic Indicators, which some market analysts use to forecast economic recessions and recoveries. A positive correlation between money-supply growth and economic growth exists only on inflation-adjusted M2 growth, and only if the new money goes into new investment rather than as debt to support speculation on rising asset prices. Sustainable economic expansions are based on real production, not on speculative debt.
In 2004, longer-term interest rates actually declined from their June high of 4.82% to 4.20% at year-end even as short-term rates rose in a "measured pace" to 2.25% in December 2004 (from all time low of 1% in June 2003 to 5.5% in June 2006), with the 2004 money supply growing at a 5.67% annual rate. This reflected a credit market unconcerned with long-term inflation despite a sinking US dollar and oil prices rising above $50 a barrel. The reason is that $50 oil raised asset value at a faster pace than price inflation of commodities. $100 oil only doubles the impact.

In March 2000, OPEC punctured the Greenspan easy-money bubble by reversing the fall of oil prices. The FOMC was forced to respond to the change in the rate of inflation, no longer being held down by declines in oil prices. Because the easy money had stimulated only speculation that did not produce any real growth, the easy-money bubble of 2000 evolved into the next debt-driven asset bubble in housing that burst in August 2007. The smart money realized in 2000 that the market's march toward $50 oil was on, as the smart money realized in 2007 that the march towards $150 oil was on. And in 2005, $50 oil appeared to be giving Greenspan's debt-driven asset bubble a second life, most of which ended in the real-estate/housing sector. If oil should fall back to $25 a barrel as the White House wanted, the debt-driven asset bubble would have popped with a bang.

As it turned out, the housing bubble burst from a credit collapse in August 2007 that the Fed under Bernanke tried to bail out with massive liquidity injection and oil went on to $130. The Fed now appears to be assuming that oil prices will soon subside, based in large part on information on futures prices. Yet there are limits to the extent to which futures prices can indicate price trends, since arbitrage prevents them from moving very far out of line with current prices.

There was solid evidence that the 1970s recycling of petrodollars, which mostly ended up in the dollar assets in the United States anyway, contributed to US inflation as much as the higher retail price of gasoline. It in essence siphoned off additional global funds to purchase higher-priced oil for investment in US real estate, which was the only sector the then unsophisticated Arab money managers thought they knew enough about to handle. By the 1990s, they were more sophisticated. Some had expected that a new injection of petrodollars would sustain the collapsing "new economy" equity market of the 1990s. It did not work because, even at $35, oil was still behind its pre-1973 price relative to the peak Nasdaq in June 1999, the equivalent of which would bring $120 oil.

The drop in oil prices after 1997 was mostly a cyclical effect of the drastic reduction of demand from the Asian financial crisis, which impacted the whole world. There was zero pressure even in the US to raise oil prices at that time, because of the effect they had on keeping easy-money inflation low. Even oil companies were not really upset by this temporary condition because, until oil prices dropped below $7 per barrel, it was not a big deal since that was the offshore production cost in the North Sea. The wellhead cost on land was less than $4 per barrel, plus market-induced leasehold costs. North Sea oil was higher because of fixed offshore drilling investments. In 1998, oil could stay at anywhere above $7 for quite a few years without doing any lasting harm to the US or Europe. It was widely expected to go back up to $35 by the end of 2000, and a lot of people would get rich in the process. OPEC was touting the line of argument that high prices would stimulate new exploration to get the non-OPEC consumers to accept costlier oil. In the long run, less new exploration would be good for OPEC. Before 1973, the whole world was happy with $3 oil. As for the US, cheap oil kept inflation (as measured by the Fed) low, the dollar high and dollar interest rates low. These benefits outweighed the oil-sector problems created by a collapse in oil prices. In oil, no one has told the truth for more than 80 years, or since its discovery.

The problem with cheap oil

It is often overlooked that the United States is a major oil producer. In fact, before the discovery of oil in the Middle East in the 1930s, the US was the world's biggest exporter of oil. "Oil for the lamps of China" was a slogan of the Standard Oil monopoly. It is not clear that cheap oil is in the national interest of the US. Cheap oil distorts the US economy in unconstructive ways. In recent years of cheap oil, advances in conservation have all been abandoned. Until this year, US consumers were buying eight-cylinder SUVs with 400 horsepower that deliver only six miles per gallon in urban traffic, as well as air-conditioned convertibles. Even with $4 gasoline, commuters face only a $1,000 annual increase in their gas bills. Vehicle prices have risen faster than gasoline prices in recent decades. Of course, the rest of the world outside the US has been operating on $4 gasoline for a long time.

Hundred-dollar oil is not an economic disaster but it is a political problem. Hundred-dollar oil needs not be damaging to the global economy, but it nevertheless forces a restructuring of the global economy in ways that have political reverberations. To begin with, $100 oil will in the long run stimulate more exploration and production, and reactivate idle wells that are uneconomic at $10 per barrel. It will also make alternative energy economically more viable. Also the global economy is growing more energy-efficient with new technology and the effect of oil price on the economy is much less than in the 1970s. And $100 oil will prevent a return to the era of abusive waste of energy caused by excessively low oil prices. Just as low wages encourage misuse of labor, unreasonably low oil cost creates incentives for misuse of energy and discourages the search for alternative energy sources.

The only trouble is that $100 oil takes money from the pocket of consumers and delivers it to the oil producers (not just Arabs), who then reinvest it in Wall Street. The net result is a transfer of wealth from the "working families" of the world to the capitalists the world over. Consumer demand will shift, with more money spent on fuel and utilities and less for other types of consumption that improve the standard of living, but equity prices will rise because there will be more dollars chasing the same number of shares. What is more troubling is that the appreciation of the resultant enlarged proven oil reserves will fuel more debt at the same debt-to-equity ratio. The current structure of the overcapacity economy is such that more debt can only go to support consumption and speculative, not productive, investment, causing a new unsustainable debt bubble.
A reduction of oil taxes will leave more money in consumers' pockets. Governments can make up the resultant tax shortfall by increasing tax rates on oil-asset appreciation - perhaps, in the case of the United States, to fund the coming Social Security shortfall. But governments tend to resist fuel-tax reduction because of the flawed ideology that fuel taxes encourage conservation. Capital-gain tax measures are resisted on the doctrine that what hurts capital hurts the poor also, if not more. This ideological fixation is increasingly inoperative in a world saddled with overcapacity and widening income disparity. Any development that reduces demand is deadly for the current global economic structure. Therein lies the key issue of the coming oil crisis - ballooned equity prices unsupported by wage income and a dampening of consumer demand due to high prices. The world enjoyed a boom from $10 oil for a decade. During that boom, income disparity increased both domestically and globally. Now, a return to operative market price for oil should not be allowed to continue this trend of widening income disparity.

I wrote in 2005: "We now appear to be heading toward a replay of the early 1980s when a widening trade deficit and a precipitous fall of the dollar triggered the 1987 collapse of the equity markets. Greenspan's strategy of reducing market regulation by substituting it with crisis intervention is merely swapping the extension of the boom for increased severity of the bust down the road. Greenspan appears to be looking to $50 oil to sustain his debt bubble. While $50 oil is not a problem in the long run, it could give Greenspan a super-size headache if it serves merely to fuel more debt. Greenspan started his tenure at the Fed with a market crash. Will the wizard of irrational exuberance end his tenure with another market crash?" My question was answered two years later by the 1997 credit crisis which even the Fed now is saying the market would not see a bottom until the end of 2009.

June 25, 2008

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