Hot Discussions :
Healthcare
Joe Lieberman
Afghanistan
Bank of America
Eric Holder
more …
back
Raves
Poll Comment
None of these answers are totally correct. Check out, http://www.unionleader.com/ar... for a great editorial from the New Hampshire Union Leader, it really hits the nail on the head. Hitting rock: Dems oblivious on oil Saturday, Jul. 12, 2008 MAYBE THE quickest way to lower oil and gas prices would be this: Immediately enroll every Democratic member of Congress in an entry-level economics class. The lack of even a basic grasp of economic concepts has led Democrats to oppose sensible policies that would begin to lower oil and gas prices. Instead, they push hair-brained ideas that make no sense. Senate candidate Jeanne Shaheen howls incessantly about speculators. She claims that speculators trading on electronic exchanges and overseas are driving up the price of oil and if only we cracked down on them the price would fall. But here is what Walter Lukken, chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission, said about that idea last week: "We haven't evidence that speculators are broadly driving these prices." To the extent that futures trading is increasing prices, the major culprits are not unregulated traders, as Shaheen keeps saying. The real problem is that with demand continuing to outstrip supply, traders see no end to rising prices. The value of a barrel of oil today stays high because traders believe it will be more valuable in the future. Any step Congress takes to produce a large increase in future supply -- opening the outer continental shelf to drilling, for example -- will reduce current prices. If there will be a lot more oil 10 years from now, a barrel of oil today loses some of its investment value, and its price falls. As Harvard economics professor Martin Feldstein wrote in The Wall Street Journal on July 1, "Increasing the expected future supply of oil would also reduce today's price. That fall in the current price would induce an immediate rise in oil consumption that would be matched by an increase in supply from the OPEC producers and others with some current excess capacity or available inventories." This is pretty basic stuff. And yet Democrats are oblivious. They adamantly oppose more domestic drilling, claiming that it won't affect prices for decades. Clearly, they have yet to grasp the basic concepts of supply and demand. Then there is Rep. Carol Shea-Porter's pet policy: forcing oil companies to drill on land they already lease. Economists and oil industry experts have roundly criticized this proposal as completely useless. It would force oil companies to drill speculatively or where there is no or little oil -- or into oil wells that are already tapped! Meanwhile, she refuses to let them access America's largest untapped oil reserves. The solution offered by Sen. Barack Obama and other Democrats: Impose a windfall profits tax on oil companies. But of course, that will do nothing to increase the supply of oil or reduce demand. Because the party that controls Congress has no idea how the economy works, it looks like we are going to be stuck with high oil and gas prices for a long, long time.
brozak
August 09, 2008 03:41:43
Peter Griffin
August 08, 2008 19:57:50
SodaHead Hot Trends
Originals
Traffic Tickets: What is the best way to fight them?
by
Kelly Anderson
5
Obama Will Destroy America With Science
by
Hope Alexander
17
Is there a dime's worth of difference between the Democrats an...
by
Andy Zarowny
0
Community
Who is prettier? Sarah Palin or Michelle Obama?
by
Marie/M2M2K
3,354
Thank YOU For Helping Me Get 100,000 Raves! :-D
by
safari
181
The Vile History of The Democratic Party pt.2
by
Deep007
215
Questions
more
Hot
Recent
Blogs
more
Hot
Recent
Create
more
Question
Blog
Poll Widget
More
more
Groups
Find People
Submit Article
US
World
Business
Entertainment
Music
Living
Religion
Sports
Technology
Remember Me
Forgot Password?
or
Register for free!
Login
or
Register for free!
Cancel