It's not just the money that it takes out of Western consumers, although that is pretty staggering in its own right. Between 2005 and 2007, soaring oil prices transferred roughly a trillion dollars from consumers' wallets throughout the OECD to OPEC producers. And when gasoline prices were $4 per gallon last Memorial Day weekend (or as much as $1.50 per litre in Canada), many North American households found themselves paying more to fill their gas tanks than feed their families.
If the recession is really about triple-digit oil prices, then the recovery is going to be a lot more challenging.
SHOOT: To summarise, you can't bail-out an energy problem. You can't bail-out the fact that less oil is being produced. It's an unsolvable. All you can do is reduce your consumption, reduce your users, grow less, decline, contract. Nobody wants to talk about that.
If past oil shocks, like the two OPEC ones, created deep world recessions, why wouldn't the biggest oil shock of all be a logical suspect for triggering today's recession? |
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