Economic Impact of Peak Oil Part 3: What's Ahead?
We cannot know exactly what is ahead. In this part, we look at one possible future scenario. When we think of economic impacts, we usually think of the impacts that the squeeze of higher oil prices will bring--such as energy price inflation, food price inflation, and the need for more mass transit.
While these "squeeze" impacts are expected to occur, the real problem may be the discontinuities that occur, because of pressure on monetary systems and pressure on political systems. These pressures can cause unexpected results such as:
• Hyperinflation or deflation that indirectly results in a major decline in imports of all kinds (not just oil),
• Major changes in governments, and
• Fast declines in oil production in some oil exporting countries.
Hopefully, a scenario such as what I have described will never happen. Thinking about it, and why it might or might not happen, can perhaps give us better insight as to how we should prepare for the years ahead.
While these "squeeze" impacts are expected to occur, the real problem may be the discontinuities that occur, because of pressure on monetary systems and pressure on political systems. These pressures can cause unexpected results such as:
• Hyperinflation or deflation that indirectly results in a major decline in imports of all kinds (not just oil),
• Major changes in governments, and
• Fast declines in oil production in some oil exporting countries.
- What impacts do you expect peak oil to have in the future?
- How soon might such discontinuities occur?
- If there is hyperinflation in the United States, what kinds of effects might there be? How about massive deflation?
- If the monetary system fails, what are the options for replacing it?
- What kind of new monetary system would work?
- What kind of financial system would work with a fiat monetary system, long-term inflation, and a declining economy?
- I learned that money is always a store of value. Isn't that what economics teaches?
- What will future trade look like in scenarios such as you are discussing?
- What will happen to large companies?
- What kind of economy can continue, without large companies, with very few imports, and with a finance system as you described?
- Will there be rationing of gasoline and diesel fuel?
- How much new infrastructure would we be able to build, after the discontinuity?
- If we need to use more manual labor to grow our food, how will that work? Right now it seems like there are a lot of huge farms.
- Which countries are likely to fare best in the transition to a scenario such as you describe?
- What might a country do to prepare for life after the discontinuity?
Hopefully, a scenario such as what I have described will never happen. Thinking about it, and why it might or might not happen, can perhaps give us better insight as to how we should prepare for the years ahead.
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