The Gas Price Paradox: Don't Celebrate Cheaper
Oil<http://www.theatlantic.com/business/print/2011/12/the-gas-price-paradox-dont-celebrate-cheaper-oil/249488/>
By
Derek Thompson
*Gas prices doubled their drop in the last two weeks, creating a big
discount for tens of millions of drivers. Hold your applause.*
[image: Screen Shot 2011-12-05 at 11.06.54
AM.png]<http://cdn.theatlantic.com/static/mt/assets/business/Screen%20Shot%202011-12-05%20at%2011.06.54%20AM.png>If
the fragile recovery is on a yo-yo, oil prices are the string. The
smaller the string, the higher our growth. Post-recession GDP growth
reached its height at the end of 2009, when national gas prices were about
$2.70. By April 2011, gas prices expanded to $4, and the economy fell below
single-digit growth. But gas inflation has receded in every month since,
and GDP has steadily climbed back to 2 percent.

The top story from
CNN<http://www.cnn.com/2011/12/04/travel/gas-prices/index.html>this
weekend celebrated gas prices continuing their slide. The average
price of regular gasoline is $3.29 a gallon, CNN reported, "down 9 cents
from two weeks earlier, and down a total of 18 cents over the past six
weeks."

This is reason to celebrate, if you're looking at the pump. Not so much if
you're looking at the world economy. A bit of recent history can temper the
enthusiasm. Remember six months ago when voters were begging the White
House to "do something!" about gas prices? They didn't do anything, because
they couldn't do anything, but gas prices went down anyway. Crude oil is an
international commodity whose price moves based on international supply and
demand factors over which the U.S. government exerts almost no short-term
influence.

What assisted in the price slide? Well, China slowed down, India slowed
down, and Europe watched its weaker economies slow-walk into a depression.
As a result, Americans are enjoying a 50 cent-per-gallon discount on March
gas prices -- although that is still about 40 cents above 2010's average.
It's coming at the price of some extremely worrying developments across the
world.

Policymakers like to call for smarter "counter-cyclical" policy. In other
words, if the U.S. is growing, taxes should be higher, spending should
lower, and regulations should be stronger to restrain inflation and the
excesses of economic exuberance. Or if the U.S. is struggling, we should
cut taxes, raise spending, and suspend rules to encourage companies to take
risks that might result in additional hiring.

But oil prices offer a natural counter-cyclical foil to the U.S. economy
that's even stronger. The U.S. accounts for about a quarter of the world's
crude oil demand. When we get on a roll, the market notices. Since the
market's attention moves faster than oil suppliers, good news out of the
U.S. -- all things being equal -- usually moves oil prices up. Higher oil
prices might be a positive indicator of U.S. growth, but they're bad for
U.S. growth.

And that's the thing about oil prices. If you mute supply factors, good
news (oil prices are down!) is bad news (something going wrong with the
world economy); and bad news (oil prices are up!) is good news (something's
growing right).

The solution for the U.S. government might be to "counter" the
counter-cyclicality of gas prices. As Dan Indiviglio
suggested<http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/08/the-catch-22-recovery-we-need-to-keep-gas-prices-low/243526/>a
few months ago, the U.S. government could institute a temporary price
ceiling for average gas prices while growth and unemployment are weak. In a
sentence: Washington would pay for the difference between, say, $3.50 and
the natural price of a gallon of gasoline until growth exceeded 3 percent
for a full year or unemployment fell below 7 percent. Just one problem:
Subsidizing gasoline in a recession with billions of deficit-financed
dollars is the miraculous sort of policy that would piss off
environmentalists *and* conservatives.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM
*Expect the unexpected!!!
*

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