Its a fact that our nation's wealth is dependent on the continued growth of our economy. The growth of our econmy is dependent on a constant stream of natural resources.So I found this report by the UN very interesting:http://www.unep.org/resourcepanel/Publications/Decoupling/tabid/56048/Default.aspx
7/10/2011 5:25:19 PM
Well, it seems logical to think that at some point commodities will become so expensive that it will start being insanely profitable to recycle pretty much everything, which would lead to better recycling technology.So basically the same shit they've been telling us for decades.
7/10/2011 9:20:45 PM
The magnitude and implications of the 2000s commodity boom are understated or simply unknown by almost everyone out there.It is truly amazing the scale of escalation of prices we witnessed during that time period. But possibly more concerning is the snap back from the recession price levels. Almost every price in history has shown a "new paradigm" to later crash, but I'm not so sure about this one, considering that it is so global and so massive.I think it's likely that the underlying driver is the industrialization of a large fraction of the world. I think we might be seeing the endgame for globalization, although it might be a little premature to be saying that. Either way, for many things there is a definable ceiling for the demand, which is the point that everyone in the world is consuming similarly to Americans. The NATO countries also are going to have to change many things about how they live, and this does not sound easy to say the least.I think the only thing that can really be said clearly is that if this commodity bubble continues to grow, then other things will fall. Real estate, for instance, can not support current price levels if oil continues to rise in price. The valuations are too spread out among sparsely populated suburban areas for that.
7/10/2011 9:49:47 PM
I agree with both you guysas to recycling -- If it becomes the main source of our resources it still says a few things. Recycling is still energy intensive and can use a lot of water and I believe the point where it is possible on a very large scale is pretty expensive which is gonna be a drag on our economic growth.I do think we are lucky that Americans have consumed so much in the past because our landfills may actually become valuable assets which is pretty interesting to think about.
7/10/2011 11:00:58 PM
Resource shortages have developed in the past and they have always subsided. Investors are pouring money into developing new mines and expanding existing ones, driving up production very quickly over time. Meanwhile, as China gradually becomes post industrial its resource consumption will flatten (as America's has been for decades). Rising production will eventually run into flattened demand, and prices will fall back.
7/11/2011 12:31:01 AM
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7/11/2011 9:32:47 AM
7/11/2011 10:23:05 AM
7/11/2011 10:35:57 AM
7/11/2011 12:24:13 PM
^^Admittedly I'm pretty ignorant about the future of Nuclear Energy. I understand it has a lot of potential, but it just doesn't seem like any of that is being realized. There are obviously a lot of complications and it seems like there are a huge number of steps that would need to occur in order for it to carry the ever increasing energy demands. As we get more desperate, things could fall into place, I'm just not holding my breath.Take that opinion with a grain of salt though. Like I said I'm biased (for various reasons) towards a more low-energy future than what we currently live in.Does this mean that you envision a future where we are forced to slowly transition to Nuclear supplemented with renewables but are able to atleast live lifestyles that somewhat similar to the present? You mentioned that you thought globalization could be on its way out (eventually), I usually associate this with a lack of energy to move goods globally, but why couldnt small thorium (Molten salt?) reactors be put on cargo ships? What was your reasoning for saying that.As far as renewables I think they are going to become more important, and I welcome them, but barring some big leap in technology (specifically I'm thinking solar efficiency) I don't see them as being able to replace fossil fuels, atleast not in totality. The high-altitude stuff just seems a little pipe-dreamy to me. For them to be built on that scale we have to start talking about rare metal availability etc.^yeah I suppose I meant our standard of living. But isn't our standard of living connected with the growth of the economy (I realize this isn't true in all cases)? If we all become poorer working in the mines (nevermind being replaced by robots) then who will have the money to buy the goods that are being produced (made from the resources we extract). Fewer consumers, or less consumer buying power, means a slowed economy.[Edited on July 11, 2011 at 12:44 PM. Reason : ?]
7/11/2011 12:36:53 PM
^^ I often wonder this for just about everything that causes unemployment. Your argument is logically true, but when oil prices spike companies keep talking about how they have to cut back. This often comes in the form of laying off people because if you are a business that uses the commodity as a necessity (like a plastics manufacturer) then you can't cut back on oil, you have to cut back on people.I feel like this argument was made on a major scale in 2008 (on the entire US economy scale). The increase in the price of oil squeezes balance sheets and we should all understand what that leads to. But your economic argument would possibly mean that that loss of jobs would be made up with job gains in the extraction industry. If not there, then the profits create wealth that stockholders absorb, when would hopefully someday create more jobs.Of course, this is an incomplete example since the US is a petroleum importer (not sure about commodities as a whole). So jobs lost here would mean jobs gained overseas, and then hopefully we'll console ourselves with some vague notion of re-balancing that may or may not eventually occur and bring jobs back.I tend to think there is a tradeoff between jobs and purchasing power. Nations can use policy to shift the balance one way or the other, and the mercantilism policies of major exporters like China and Germany can be said to be punishing consumers in favor of workers. I might be getting slightly off topic here...But I think the same arguments that we make for the trade balance today can be made for the inter-generational trade balance, although I'm not sure how much we should expect that to influence or not influence employment. Let's say that we're talking about pricing in depletion of resources, so we choose to tax extraction industries. That could be similar to taxing imports (generic external economic source), which would lead to lower quality of life but ideally more jobs as people are employed doing activities that would use labor to replace oil (like efficiency). Whether or not this translates into unemployment is disputable, but either way it represents a transfer of wealth/power between the capital and labor markets, which can easily translate into unemployment.Oh my I talk about macroeconomics too much.[Edited on July 11, 2011 at 12:47 PM. Reason : ^][Edited on July 11, 2011 at 12:50 PM. Reason : ]
7/11/2011 12:47:29 PM
7/11/2011 1:09:47 PM
7/11/2011 3:35:55 PM
7/11/2011 4:05:23 PM
7/12/2011 10:27:39 AM
7/12/2011 10:48:52 AM
^ Indeed, the oil extraction industry is very capital intensive and highly illiquid. Famously, look at how much production budged in response to the ballooning and complete cratering of the price in 2008.The vast vast vast majority of short term changes in price goes to the revenue of the stakeholders. Some of that will be directly reinvested into extraction (lol, probably very little), then much more will be reinvested generically into the capital markets, and then some will be spent. To buy themselves something nice.
7/12/2011 11:24:45 AM
The buying power of oil owners or those that have invested in it doesn't diminish but the rest of the world's does. Those that stand to profit from increased energy prices are a small minority compared to those that can profit during falling energy prices. I'd argue that concentrated wealth does not produce the same amount of demand that a more evenly spread wealth does. In this way a vast majortiy of the foreigners that are driving the Japanese economy (The world's middle class) are going to feel the energy pinch just like the Japanese and have diminished buying power.alsoA cargo ship is more fuel efficient than a truck until it gets to port, where it still has to go through the same distribution lines as a factory trucking goods across town. So you are talking about a truck trip vs a truck trip + a cargo ship trip
7/12/2011 12:41:43 PM
7/12/2011 2:08:28 PM
7/12/2011 2:58:00 PM
7/12/2011 4:09:45 PM
7/12/2011 4:33:20 PM
The GMO Commodity Index includes soybeans, corn, and other agricultural commodities whose prices have increased in recent years, but this has not really been discussed in this thread. These increases concern me more than increases in the price of zinc and copper or even oil. I am worried about ag commodities because the recent rise in their prices could be an indication of things to come as climate changes continues to take a toll on crop yields. http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/06/science/earth/06warming.htmlIf that is true, that means the cost of production using current methods will only increase with time (because lord knows no govt will take action to mitigate the problem). Maybe a new green revolution will change all that, but if it doesn't we will have to devote more and more land&resources to agricultural production (ignoring possible increased volatility in food production). That will create a clear drain on a standard of living. Who knows how large.There is an interesting book called "The Little Ice Age: How Climate Made History", which describes the uneasy adjustments that were made to a previous climate event. Executive Summary: Thames River Ice Fairs and Mass Starvation.[Edited on July 12, 2011 at 4:54 PM. Reason : ``]
7/12/2011 4:51:54 PM
^^ MrFrog, you said it yourself: "modern distribution models." The relevant factor about distribution in the modern world is that energy is cheap. Walmart does not mind shipping the goods to distribution centers because doing so consumes cheap land and energy to conserve expensive labor. But energy has not always been cheap. 100 years ago energy was ungodly expensive. And in that world, cities did not exist that were not either on the coast or connected by rail to the coast. Goods were sorted right there at the port or rail head. The idea of shipping containers a hundred miles away to be sorted at a Walmart distribution center would have been absurd.
7/12/2011 5:30:43 PM
7/12/2011 5:39:00 PM
The federal reserve is responsible for regulating the money supply. If the structure of the economy changes to produce a lower over-all monetary velocity then temporary deflation will result until the federal reserve increases the money supply to compensate. Recessions happen. They are also temporary. The current recession is an exception for reasons that have nothing to do with energy prices.
7/12/2011 6:02:15 PM
I don't believe the current recession had much to do with energy prices, but energy prices could hinder us from a speedy, full recovery. Wrapping back in with the OP, how are things going to change so that we can cope with this new reality?
7/13/2011 9:03:32 AM
7/13/2011 9:48:25 AM
^ Otherwise known as Adam Smith, perhaps?
7/13/2011 10:21:29 AM
I agree with LoneSnark's logic but i'd prefer GDP $'s staying in my community not buying skyscrapers in Dubai.
7/14/2011 5:11:05 PM
Nevermind. No time for this now.[Edited on July 15, 2011 at 12:23 AM. Reason : .]
7/15/2011 12:23:06 AM