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  • Cost of Oil and Gas

    Foreign Policy, Monetary Policy, and Gas Prices

    by Ron Paul

    The burning issue in Washington today is high gas prices, and it won’t go away anytime soon. Americans are not happy about paying $3 per gallon at the pump, and they want something done about it.

    But price controls won’t work, and allegations of price gouging and “windfall profits” amount to nothing more than congressional grandstanding. No government official or politician is fit to define a “fair” price for gas or a “fair” profit for oil companies. This is not the Soviet Union. The last thing we need is centralized government planning when it comes to our precious energy supplies.

    The price of oil, like everything else, depends on supply and demand. What we really need to focus on is how government keeps the supply of refined gasoline too low. This is not as easy as demanding price controls, and does not fit into 30-second sound bites. But as with so many issues, we must peel away decades of government interference to really understand the problem.

    Most people understand that federal restrictions on exploring, drilling, and refining domestic oil have made us dependent on various questionable Middle East governments. We should expand this into a greater understanding of how American foreign policy increases gas prices here at home. Before the war in Iraq, oil was about $28 per barrel. Today it is over $70. Iraq was a significant source of worldwide oil, but its production has dropped 50% since 2002. Pipeline sabotage and fires are routine; we have been unable to prevent them. Furthermore, the general instability in the Middle East created by the war causes oil prices to rise everywhere.

    The sooner we get out of Iraq and allow the Iraqis to solve their own problems the better. Soaring gasoline prices are one giant unintended consequence of the war, pure and simple.

    Even so, many war hawks are seriously agitating for an attack on Iran – another major supplier of worldwide oil. They are not concerned one bit about the impact such an attack would have on the wallets of average Americans; their obsession with regime change in Iran trumps all common sense. But let me be clear: An attack on Iran, coupled with our continued presence in Iraq, could hike gas prices to $5 or $6 per gallon.

    We also must understand the effect monetary policy has on gas prices. The price of gas, like the price of all things, goes up because of inflation. And inflation by definition is an increase in the money supply. The money supply is controlled by the Federal Reserve Bank, and responds to the deficits Congress creates. When deficits are excessive, as they are today, the Fed creates new dollars out of thin air to buy Treasury bills and keep interest rates artificially low. But when new money is created out of nothing, the money already in circulation loses value. Once this is recognized, prices rise – some more rapidly than others. That’s what we see today with the cost of energy.

    If we want to do something about gas prices, we should demand greatly reduced welfare and military spending, a balanced budget, and fewer regulations that interfere with the market development of alternative fuels. All subsidies and special benefits to energy companies should be ended. We also should demand a return to a sound commodity monetary system.

    And in the meantime, let’s eliminate federal gas taxes at the pump. That alone would save Americans 18.4 cents per gallon. By contrast, oil companies only make about 10 cents per gallon. So maybe it’s government that’s being greedy.

    Oil prices are at a level where consumers reduce consumption voluntarily. The market will work if we let it. But as great as the market economy is, it cannot overcome a foreign policy that is destined to disrupt oil supplies and threaten the world with an expanded and dangerous conflict in the Middle East. And it cannot overcome a monetary policy destined to inflate our dollars into oblivion.
    Achkerov kute.

  • #2
    Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

    Or better yet, how about we begin drilling on lands WE own? We have the ability, just not the go ahead...

    Anyway, at $3, has anybody here or does anybody here KNOW anybody who has had to change their lifestyle to afford gas?

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

      Yah I've changed my plans quite a bit for this Summer. Instead of doing 2 or 3 long trips (2000 miles each way), I might do a bunch of more local trips (less than 500 miles) and maybe do only 1 really long trip. I will also probably drive a lot slower (less than 75MPH) to keep the fuel consumption in check. The jeep loves to be around 55MPH. Push it to around 80 and the gas milage drops big time (by as much as 20 to 30%).
      this post = teh win.

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      • #4
        Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

        Planet Ark
        Providing positive environmental actions, for everyone.


        New Zealand plans carbon tax to meet Kyoto targets

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        • #5
          Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

          petrol here has hit 1.45 a litre last year this times it was about 70cents

          where fukt in 25 years time when there will be no oil left

          we should be doing more research in finding ways to replace oil

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          • #6
            Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

            I drive faster now...since the streets are less crowded.

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            • #7
              Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

              Originally posted by ddd
              I drive faster now...since the streets are less crowded.


              Am I the only one here who has heard the theory that oil may replenish itself?

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              • #8
                Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

                When will the prices drop?
                -Peace 2 All.

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                • #9
                  Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

                  "LET’S RAISE GAS TAXES AND LOWER INCOME TAXES"


                  My question with ecotax always has been how to prevent the government from depending on people acting in eco-bad ways. I'd rather pay $3 a gallon if $2 of that went to taxes (and that tax back to good causes, including ecology and human needs), rather than to oil execs, though.


                  Originally posted by Anahita after saying "I'm kitty-like"
                  She wants a car with a cupholder armrest
                  She wants a car that will get her there
                  She's changing her name from "Kitty" to "Karen"...
                  --CAKE (Short Skirt Long Jacket)
                  Global Warming thread: http://forum.armenianclub.com/showpo...4&postcount=65

                  Originally posted by Anahita
                  Dharma: [about running opponent Karen Love] It's her name. I mean, how can you *not* vote for "care and love"? Guess I might as well change my name to "lower taxes and free balloons for all the kids."
                  Last edited by Anahita; 06-23-2006, 05:11 PM.

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                  • #10
                    Re: Cost of Oil and Gas

                    Here is a little joke with truth. Three inmates are talking:

                    1st prisoner says, "I'm from Exxon and I'm in prison because they say I charged too much for oil. Price gouging they called it."

                    2nd prisoner says, "I'm from Walmart and I'm in prison because they say I charged too little for my product. Unfair competition they called it."

                    3rd prisoner says, "I'm from Samsung and I'm in prison because they say I charged the same price as everyone else for my commodity DRAM chips. Price fixing they called it."

                    Anyway, the moral of the story is that the government is a joke when it comes to understanding prices.
                    Achkerov kute.

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