Offner wrote:
First see the article
in Business Week entitled "Why Obama's Crackdown on Oil Speculators Won't Work."
Then answer these
questions:
1.) If a crackdown on
oil speculators won’t work, does it not imply that there are oil speculators?
2.) Is it possible
that Wall Street oil speculators affect the price of oil?
3.) The bigger
question is whether speculation on food, water and other necessities exists and
whether such action is ethical?
4.) Is failure to
restrict unethical behavior unethical?
My response to his questions is set forth under corresponding
numbers:
1.) Yes of course there are. The question should not be
whether there are speculators but whether it is ever possible to eliminate them
and whether they are bad. The answer is that it is not possible to eliminate
them and in many cases not even possible to regulate them. Sometimes they are
bad, sometimes good, most often neither.
2.) It is not only possible, it is probable. But that is not
necessarily bad. Look at the article you sent me. He argues convincingly that
speculators even-out the speed at which prices change. Without them, as
happened some years ago the price can quadruple almost over-night and a more
gradual rise is better for the economy and consumers.
3.) Yes and Yes. Let me take this down to basics. There is a
rumor that sugar, or for that matter water, will be in short supply. Most
people, i.e. consumers upon hearing this will head for the markets and hoard
it. The result is the price goes up and soon the shelves are empty. A
self-fulfilling prophecy. Now let us suppose a larger speculator wants to take
advantage of the situation and so he goes out and buys many tons of sugar, puts
them in a ware house (or he buys futures) and then taking advantage of the
rising prices resells it at a hefty profit. As he and others begin to sell the
price goes down. Is he/she now a good speculator? How do you stop this? Do you
make it illegal for anyone to buy more than a certain amount? How do you
determine the amount? How would this effect a legitimate store or a legitimate
wholesaler, who by the nature of their trade must buy large amounts?
The way to stop this is price controls and rationing which
brings about a black market, where the price is even higher and even less sugar
in the stores. We are now seeing this in Venezuela.
Are there times when rationing and price controls are
appropriate? Yes!!! But only in extreme cases, such as war-time, when the evils
of the black market are preferred to letting hoarding control, but it is always
a close question. Where the hoarding is by a limited group, intent on creating
shortages and raising prices, it falls afoul of the anti-trust laws and
definitely should be prosecuted.
Is Obama's approach sound? I don't know, but it is good politics. He is doing something!!!
Raising the margin price on commodities speculation seems like a sensible thing to do, but it takes someone more knowledgeable than I to analyze the consequences. The article you sent me seems knowledgeable and objective.
I will say this. When Allan Greenspan talked about the stock market suffering from irrational exuberance, the obvious thing to do, as far as I could see and still believe, was to raise the margin requirement, which was within the power of the Fed, but because of Greenspan's hostility to all regulations this was not done - ditto for so many other things that could have headed off the crash.
But I don't know the commodities market - We apparently have regulations but we need money to enforce them. Everything else is shooting in the dark. Simplistic answers whether from Left or Right rarely have any merit.
The article in Business Week appears to be an intelligent one. It recognizes
that regulations are important and need enforcing by the CFTC. Thus it is
apparent that we have regulations in place that are not being enforced, or at
least not being enforced adequately. But the Republican Congress will never
appropriate the money needed. Instead, they will make sure that what can be
done is not done, and then blame the President, who can only do so much without
Congress' help.
There are many problems with the world's food supply that are exacerbated by US policy.
The use of US ethanol as an additive to
gasoline has created a shortage of corn and driven the price higher, but the
corn lobby will prevent Congress from changing this.
Our foreign aid program with food is counter-productive. The
law requires that we not give money to aid organizations for food aid, but
rather buy the food from American farmers at much higher prices than we could
buy it on the world market and it must be shipped in US vessels. If the law
would allow our aid to be by buying the food from African farmers, we would
save money both in the price of the food and in the shipping costs and we would
aid the African economy. Now it enriches the American corporate farmers and
hurts the African economy because it competes with the African grown food and
drives that price down.
4.) No and the question is irrelevant since I have said such
action is not unethical. But even where it is unethical there is always a
weighing of unintended consequences. Simplistic questions and simplistic
answers to complex problems are, well, simplistic.
I then added:
The oil market is a world market. How do you regulate trades
made outside the US? If you rationed gasoline in the US, it would have no
effect on the price of oil on world markets. If you had price controls on
gasoline that were below the world price of oil, no one could afford to sell
gasoline, since they would lose money on every gallon. World markets and
globalization make a new ball game. But we can no more change it than we could
stop the industrial revolution and now the technological revolution that
brought about globalization.
Furthermore a high price of gas is not bad. It makes clean
energy and conservation much more competitive
Even boycotts have limitations. We put a boycott on Iranian
oil. But if China does not join the boycott, can it be effective? The boycott
might force the price of Iranian oil to go down, in which case China gets a
windfall. How do you stop this? Only with a full fledged blockade of Iran, an
act of war, which would put us in conflict with China and get Iran to try to
close the Straight of Hormuz. Can you imagine what the price of oil would go up
to? Speculators will make a lot of money, but they are not causing the price
rise - they are taking advantage of it. Is there anything we can do - yes, but
I am not smart enough to know what. Ask Barney Frank - he understands these
things better than I do, and while I am talking about Barney Frank I commend to
you an interview of him, which appeared in New York Magazine.
Also we do have laws on the books and the Commodities and Exchange Commission,
which needs more funding as recommended in the article you sent me to enforce the laws and regulations. But the Republicans will never authorize this. What can we do? Get rid of them to
whatever extent we can.
But I get tired of the Left and their "it’s the
speculators.”
Finally allow me to add that while normally a two party
system benefits the country, now a defeat of the Republican Party to the point
where we have only one party has the best hope of reforming the system. Now it
is broken and can't be fixed. In our system a one party system would not last
long. The Democratic Party would split in two.
Talk of a third party in our system is very
counter-productive. It would make sense if we had run-offs as e.g. the French
and most of the world do.
Comments, questions, or corrections, are welcome
and will be responded to and distributed with attribution, unless the writer
requests that he/she not be identified.
No comments:
Post a Comment