KenH
Well-Known Member
"The only true, fair price is the market price, which is the price that results from the voluntary bargaining of all market participants. And there are an awful lot of those participants in the oil industry, one of the most complex and logistically demanding industries on our planet. Reflected in the market price are the decisions of millions of individual car drivers, homeowners adjusting their thermostats, manufacturers who decide whether to burn natural gas or oil, oil producers figuring out how to squeeze more production out of existing oil fields, refiners deciding which products to create out of crude oil, speculators deciding how much oil to store for future demand, researchers developing incredible new technologies, such as deepwater drilling, horizontal drilling, satellite reconnaissance, and fracking, the decisions of transoceanic crude oil shippers, who operate the largest vessels in the world, wildcat drillers who make money only by finding oil in new locations, and countless other individuals. ...
In other words, market prices reflect reality. They reflect the actual conditions of production and the actual desires of consumers. ...
And then there is inflation. The other significant reason for the nominal rise in oil prices is simply that the value of the dollar is plummeting. Inflation now runs at 9.1 percent, a more than 40 year high. In real (inflation-adjusted) terms, gasoline prices are high, but they are still slightly below their last peak in 2012. Inflation is a Trump and Biden-created problem, when the government “printed” trillions of dollars in new money for pandemic relief. Those $1200 checks that nearly every American got, and the “PPP” largesse that most businesses got, and the trillions of dollars that local and state governments got came with a price. That price was inflation. All that new money simply reduced the purchasing power of the dollar and pushed up the nominal price of gasoline."
- rest of article at End the Gasoline Crisis: Try Motivation by Love, Not Fear | AIER
In other words, market prices reflect reality. They reflect the actual conditions of production and the actual desires of consumers. ...
And then there is inflation. The other significant reason for the nominal rise in oil prices is simply that the value of the dollar is plummeting. Inflation now runs at 9.1 percent, a more than 40 year high. In real (inflation-adjusted) terms, gasoline prices are high, but they are still slightly below their last peak in 2012. Inflation is a Trump and Biden-created problem, when the government “printed” trillions of dollars in new money for pandemic relief. Those $1200 checks that nearly every American got, and the “PPP” largesse that most businesses got, and the trillions of dollars that local and state governments got came with a price. That price was inflation. All that new money simply reduced the purchasing power of the dollar and pushed up the nominal price of gasoline."
- rest of article at End the Gasoline Crisis: Try Motivation by Love, Not Fear | AIER