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Simple chart showing why we need lower gas prices

Photobucket 
I took medium term oil price data (dark line) from http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Oil_Prices_Medium_Term.jpg (original data from http://octane.nmt.edu/gotech/Marketplace/Prices.aspx) and opinion about gov't economic policy (orange / dashed line) from http://www.sca.isr.umich.edu/ and dumped them on top of each other.  Too lazy to clean up the chart or to get the data into Excel and do statistical analysis / hypothesis testing to determine the degree of correlation. 
 
Judge for yourself.
 
I think opinion of gov't economic policy tracks similarly together with consumer sentiment (more or less). 
 
So ... if you want to get people feeling better about the economy and gov't economic policies, low gas prices might be a good start.  You're not going to get the economy going again unless you improve confidence and get people spending.  You also have to wonder about the psychological effect it had on businesses.
 
Googled around and found this guy had the same idea.
 
This guy tried something similar earlier, but gas prices weren't high enough yet to matter, so he found no correlation.
 
meh. it's neat, so just threw it out there. :p
 
edit: also looked at chart 10 (pos/neg economic news that people hear) added to the above chart (i don't have chart posted). kinda interesting. plus, how do you factor in the major events like 2000 election, recession (march-november 2001), enron, 9-11, afghanistan, iraq, 2004 election, katrina, etc. hmm.
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I'm not an economist but ...

Gee, there's a phrase I haven't heard before - the standard phrase used by misinformed dumdums before they start spouting off stupidity about things they know nothing about.
 
But the temptation is just too hard to resist!!!!! ^_^  I have to get my dumb comments in!
 
I'm not an economist but ... I was looking around for the effects of gas prices on consumer spending.  Kinda interesting and odd.  I found a few articles that dismissed the effects as unimportant.
 
First, here's one from Kudlow citing Bowyer from NRO back in January, saying that there is essentially no effect.
 
 
and here's a more recent blog from Dick Green in May following more or less the same idea ...
 
 
Now, I'm not an economist but ...

something about the numbers in the "Math" blog seems a bit too simplistic. Wouldn't the economy behave more like discrete, distinct units, rather than just one giant blob that you can mash together using broad, general numbers?
 
Not being an economist, I really only have questions, not answers.
 
1) For example, in the "Math" blog, it states that gas and related fuel expenditures are a very small percentage of spending.

However, what about the flow of money out of the country?  So if the cost of oil makes up 67% of gas (http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/oog/info/gdu/gasdiesel.asp), then this is money that is steadily being bled out of the US and into oil exporting countries (of course, some of the money probably does come back into the country, but how much? and after how much time circulating outside?).  I suppose this is worse than a tax increase since gov't spending gets reinjected back into our economy.  Does this siphoning off of money out of the country have a magnified effect?
 
2) Furthermore, he states that increases in personal income of 0.4% are slightly greater than the 0.28% increase in gas.

I'm not an economist but ... can you really just lump everyone together like that?  And where is most of the income growth coming from?
 
Suppose we divide up people into poor, middle, rich. (no, i'm not doing the class warfare thing)  Is income growth primarily in the poor, middle, or rich class?  If most of the income growth is skewed towards the top 20% with lesser gains in the remaining 80%, then the effect is going to be much different from evenly distributed income growth.

3) Furthermore, what is the % of disposable income that is being consumed on an individual basis?

High gas isn't going to affect one person that makes a million dollars, but it will have a drastic effect on 20 people that make $50,000 dollars, right?

4) How are different neighborhoods / sectors of the economy going to be affected? Poor and middle class neighborhoods and businesses might be hit harder than upscale areas because of #2, #3 above.

If you could spread the economic pain out as a giant amorphous blob, it would be nice and have minimal impact, but you're more likely to have discrete sectors / regions that collapse and get hit hard.  It's these focal points of crisis that might trigger a cascade of larger negative effects.  Dumb analogy - sunlight hitting your hand evenly = not scary. sunlight going through a magnifying glass first = scary.
 
I think a mistake people make is treating things as a giant lump, and then throwing a big, fat equation or number at it, when it would be better analyzed discretely.  I remember a math professor in lecture once saying that "Nature abhors a discontinuity" (his take on "Nature abhors a vacuum").  However, I vehemently disagree.  Mathematics is an abstraction and an idealized approximation.  Nature is ruled by a hierarchy of discontinuities and discrete entities.
 
Oh well, that's more or less the main gist of the questions that I had.  I suppose I could ask about energy costs in general, cost of petroleum based goods, plastics, etc. Or maybe lag time in consumer spending dropoff - people increase balances on credit cards to adjust, companies lower prices to sell more, but eventually, credit cards get maxed, prices can't go lower, and something has to give.  Or ripple effects and positive feedback, but too vague whatever blah blah blah.
 
unrelated - weird, i just keep seeing an image of people buying and trading around a bag filled with nothing.  wonder what happens when someone opens the bag?  oh right, keep on going like there's nothing wrong, sell it, then run away.  then again, greed kicks in, you buy back the bag of nothing hoping it will go up in price before selling it again. after a while, everyone's figured out that it's filled with nothing, but they can't help themselves. :P
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Create oil glut to drive out speculators?

Okay, so a ton of people jumped into the oil market. They realized that they could drive the price higher without a decrease in demand - or at least there would be a long lag in response time since it's hard for industries, gov't, people to change their oil consumption and usage patterns.

However, now oil and gas have hit a point where gov'ts are reducing their subsidies, Americans are driving less and buying small cars, manufacturers are switching to alternative materials, reducing manufacturing of big cars, other energy sources are looking more attractive, etc. The problem is, it takes time for demand to adjust, and if we wait that long, we will be in a world-wide recession, thanks to the speculators.

Gas prices are high.  The oil market's thrashing around on a daily basis.  It's getting rather annoying.  Very annoying.

I think it's time to drive out the speculators.  How?  Supply and demand.  Drop prices by creating an artificial glut on the market.  If you intentionally release more oil on the market than is needed, you will drive prices down and hopefully chase the speculators out the door, and then you should make it hard for them to come back in by shutting the door.  Not completely, of course.  Just raise the threshold of entry or implement some other measures to prevent the nonsense that's been going on. 
 
I'm not an economist, so maybe I'm wrong.  It's just an idea for a quick, short-term fix to avoid a global recession.  No big deal really.

 

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