Vigo said:
Cheap gas prices are totally counterproductive.
I was happy when OPEC responded to the surge of new US production coming from my backyard by flooding the market and tanking prices so that new drilling stopped.
I'll probably live to see the day that current-day energy policy is spoken of regretfully in all corners, not just the lonely one I inhabit. If things REALLY go poorly, those of you that remember 0.29/gal gas will too.
It will be grim irony if things go so badly that the boomer generation is actually still around to see that biggest of chickens come home to roost, but i don't wish for that.
Anywho, the rich will die rich, and those who stand at the ready to complain about 'high' gas prices will NOT have moved up the socioeconomic ladder in their absence, no matter how long. Low gas prices are a false economy.
Counter productive to what?
Sure, low gas prices don't entice lots of new drilling rigs to pop up and a few people may be laid off, but everyone, all around the world, uses gasoline/diesel/oil products. The product will still be produced, in some cases production will increase, so the producers will have to adjust and will continue to make money.
If fuel and oil tripled (or more) in price and stayed there, some of those that were laid off would get back to work, but the vast majority of the world (billions of people) who are not employed by the drilling industry would have less money to spend on everything else...electronics, food, tourism, clothes, investment, beers, buying a new car and on and on. Also, less fuel and oil would be used. A much, much larger percentage of the population would be negatively affected.
Pickup trucks are a HUGE cash cow for the big 3...what happens when people stop buying them in masse overnight? Wouldn't take a large increase in fuel prices to cause that. I doubt stock holders will be happy when the stock loses value, retirement plans are worth less, and have to pull back spending in every facet of the economy. They call that a recession.