Friday, December 17, 2010
Fueling the fires of inflation...
Did The Price Of Oil Help Cause The Financial Crisis Of 2008? Will Surging Oil Prices Soon Spark Another Financial Crisis?
...Just think about it. What is it going to do to U.S. households when they have to start spending four, five or even six dollars on a gallon of gas?
What is it going to do to our trucking and shipping costs?
What is it going to do to the price of food? According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, food inflation in the United States was already 1 1/2 times higher than the overall rate of inflation during the past year. But that is nothing compared to what is coming.
During 2010, the price of just about every major agricultural commodity has shot up dramatically. These price increases are just starting to filter down to the consumer level. So what is going to happen if oil shoots up to 100, 120 or even 150 dollars a barrel?
Demand for oil is only going to continue to increase. Do you know who the number one consumer of energy on the globe is today? For about a hundred years it was the United States, but now it is China. Other emerging markets are starting to gobble up oil at a voracious pace as well.
Not that the price of oil isn't highly manipulated. Of course it is. The truth is that the price of oil should not be nearly as high as it currently is. Unfortunately, you and I have very little say on the matter.
If the price of oil keep going higher, it is really going to start having a dramatic impact on global economic activity at some point. Meanwhile, oil producers and the big global oil companies will pull in record profits, and radical "environmentalists" will love it because people will be forced to start using less oil.
When it comes to oil, there are a lot of "agendas" out there, and unfortunately it looks like the pendulum is swinging back towards those who have "agendas" that favor a very high price for oil.
So what does that mean for all of us?
It is going to mean higher prices at the pump, higher prices at the supermarket and higher prices for almost everything else that we buy.
If the price of oil causes a significant slowdown in economic activity, it could also mean that a whole bunch of us may lose our jobs.
Read the whole article:
http://theeconomiccollapseblog.com/archives/did-the-price-of-oil-help-cause-the-financial-crisis-of-2008-will-surging-oil-prices-soon-spark-another-financial-crisis
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