Yes, it’s nice to play less for gasoline and heating fuel, but while some of the decline in oil prices are a result of the new unconventional oil supplies which have come on line, much of it is that the world is going into recession—demand is down from every major economy. That’s not good.
Yesterdays’ post showed what happened in the US job market over the last 6 years. It never recovered for most people. Remember, in terms of business cycle that was the recovery and the boom. Those were the good times.
As for oil, the drops are to many conventional oil producers advantage if they can sweat them out. Much of the unconventional oil which came online is not viable below $80/barrel. The viability numbers you see for countries like Saudi Arabia are not their profit break even numbers, pumping Saudi oil costs less than $10 a barrel, rather they are what the Saudi government budget needs. But the Saudis can handle a few years making less if it send their competitors into bankruptcy.
Remember that in the late 90s oil was under $20 a barrel. I would want to see oil under $40 a barrel, with excess supply, to expect an economy as good as the late 90s one was. Remember also that this is not the first time this “run a shitty economy until new sources of oil come on line” play has been tried—while the details were different, this is exactly what Carter, Reagan and the Fed of the late 70s and early 80s did. Temporize waiting for the new oil supply.
But while new oil did eventually come online, notice also that the economy never really got good ever again: you have about 4 good years in the late 90s and the rest is crap (again, for ordinary people. The wealthy did very well).
Finally, those fools in places like Canada (my home and native land) who thought the good times would never end and that letting the mixed economy (aka. manufacturing) die, are about to reap the whirlwind.
All Commodity Booms End. No exceptions. Always.
Repeat that until it sinks in.
The old Canadian economy ran as follows: during times when commodity prices were high the Canadian dollar went up making our manufactured goods uncompetitive, but we used the money from selling commodities to subsidize manufacturing. During times when commodity prices were low, the profits from manufacturing were used to subsidize the the resource producing areas of the country.
Harper, that feckless provincial incompetent and neo-liberal ideologue, has broken the Canadian mixed economy, which existed before him for over 100 years. This is probably because he’s an economist, meaning he was indoctrinated to believe neo-liberal dogma. Or perhaps he’s just a fool, hard to say.
The only Federal leader who understands the Canadian mixed economy is NDP leader Mulcair (Justin Trudeau, while has nice abs, is not very bright, unlike his father, who was a genius.)
It might not be too late to rebuild Canadian manufacturing during the oncoming recession. My fellow Canadians, think carefully about who you vote for, especially those of you in Southern Ontario. Your housing values will not stay where they are if Canada’s entire economy is based on boom and bust commodity cycles and there are no jobs except in resource extraction, flipping burgers and finance. Mulcair tried to warn you, years ago.
Learn. Or reap the consequences.
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