OilPrice.com
 
The Shale Boom, Just Getting Started: Interview with Tyler Cowen

 
By _James Stafford_ (http://oilprice.com/contributors/James-Stafford)  | 
Wed,  25 September 2013
 
Thanks to the shale boom, markets already perceive the trade balance  
optimizing, energy prices are cheaper than they would otherwise be and we’ve  
even cut carbon emissions. And we are only getting started, according Tyler  
Cowen, New York Times best-selling author and one of the most influential  
economists of the decade.  
While we aren’t likely to get past the American public’s irrationality 
over  gas prices at the pump and their confusion about why this hasn’t 
translated into  lower gas prices, that doesn’t change the fact that our shale 
boom 
is only just  beginning to affect the global economy. The only question is 
who will be the  next to latch on to this revolution
 
 
Cowen gives us the long view in his most recent book, _“Average is Over: 
Powering America Beyond the Age of  Great Stagnation”_ 
(http://www.amazon.com/Average-Is-Over-Powering-Stagnation/dp/0525953736/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1379
935030&sr=8-1&keywords=average+is+over) , and in an exclusive interview 
with  Oilprice.com, he discusses:  
•    Why energy-intensive investment is our real  future
•    Why peak oil isn’t an issue for at least  3 decades
•    Why Syria is impossible to  predict
•    Why US gas exports are a win-win  situation
•    How the US shale boom has benefited  the economy
•    How the shale boom is just getting  started
•    What the general public doesn’t get  about gas prices
•    Why we can’t do much to stop  energy market manipulation
•    Who’s right about  climate change? Wait and see… 
Interview by James Stafford of Oilprice.com 
Oilprice.com: You have written at length about "Great  Stagnation" and its 
relation to technology and natural resources. How do we  trace the "Great 
Stagnation", and are we seeing the end of our unexploited  natural resources? 
Tyler Cowen: The Great Stagnation first shows up in the data  in 1973, when 
income growth slows and productivity growth falters. It’s hard to  avoid 
the conclusion that this has something to do with the end of the age of  cheap 
energy. In my view sustainable economic growth is more dependent on energy  
than the share of the energy sector in GDP would indicate. Energy-intensive 
 investments are more likely to build for our future, compared to the  
productivity mess known as our service sector. 
I do not, however, think we are seeing the end of unexploited natural  
resources – just look at fracking. But every now and then we take a pause 
before 
 extraction technologies race ahead once again. We’ve been living in that 
pause  for much of the last 40 years--a scary thought. 
Oilprice.com: Should we still be talking about "Peak Oil"?   
Tyler Cowen: I don’t see “peak fossil fuel” being a binding  constraint 
over most of the next 30 years.  That said, new supplies take a  while to come 
to market, and the global economy is still constrained by oil  supply 
scarcity. This was evident during the price spike dating from the time of  
chaos 
in Libya. There just wasn’t enough oil for the global economy to manage a  
higher growth rate, and only now is the US economy moving beyond that  
constraint. India still faces it. 
Oilprice.com: There are rival theories concerning what a  potential US 
direct intervention in Syria would do to oil prices. How do you see  this 
playing out?    
Tyler Cowen: It would depend what we do and when we do it,  and in any case 
I don’t see this as an easy matter to predict. Perhaps the best  prediction 
is that the situation festers and we don’t have a direct US  intervention 
at all.   
Oilprice.com: Does the conflict in Libya provide us with  insight into what 
would happen to oil prices in the event of a US intervention  in Syria?   
Tyler Cowen: As mentioned above, the price experience and  the growth 
slowdown from the Libyan crisis is far from encouraging. As for  Syria, China 
would very much like to see a peaceful resolution of this entire  situation and 
they do not care per se who comes out on top. Since the US and  China want 
in broad terms the same thing from this conflict, there is a good  chance 
that can happen. 
Oilprice.com: As the debate continues over whether the US  should export 
unlimited natural gas or keep it at home, what would be better for  the US 
economy over the long-run, and why?   
Tyler Cowen: Trade benefits both nations. And it will  encourage the supply 
of gas all the more in the longer run. This is a win-win,  and I see no 
good reason to restrict exports. 
Oilprice.com: Approvals for US LNG export projects appear to  be picking up 
momentum. Has the export question already been decided?   
Tyler Cowen: The overall record of the US federal government  is 
pro-business and pro-export, and I see no reason to bet against that record  
this time 
around. 
Oilprice.com: How has the US shale revolution affected the  American 
economy?   
Tyler Cowen: Our trade balance will be coming into order and  markets 
already see this.  Energy prices are cheaper than they would be.  We’ve even 
cut 
carbon emissions, unexpectedly. 
Oilprice.com: What the general public remains confused about  is why gas 
prices are so high amidst this shale boom. How do we address this on  a level 
that is accessible to a general audience?  
Tyler Cowen: The shale boom is just getting started, most of  all on a 
global level. And a lot of complicated substitutions are required for  shale 
gas 
to lower retail gasoline prices, for instance greater use of gas to  power 
transportation. The US public never has been very rational about the price  
of gasoline, and don’t expect that to change anytime soon.  Gasoline is a  
price which we see and pay very often, too often. That means voters remember 
it  all too well. 
Oilprice.com: How has the US shale boom affected the global  economy, and 
how will US exports play into this?   
Tyler Cowen: Our shale boom is only starting to affect the  global economy. 
The question is who else will follow suit. Russia?   Argentina?  Poland? We 
will see, but I expect a lot more supply to come on  line. 
Oilprice.com: In the world of finance and banking, energy  market 
manipulation has become a hot topic, most recently with the scandal  around 
JPMorgan. 
How does this style of energy market manipulation affect  consumers?   
Tyler Cowen: Not much at all. 
Oilprice.com: Is this a trend we can't stop?  
Tyler Cowen: We can’t stop it easily. Consumers are not  really the losers 
here, rather some traders benefit at the expense of others.  There is more 
churn than we would like to have in prices and short-term  inventories. That’
s a problem, but pretty far down on my list of worries. 
Oilprice.com: On a social level, with the fashion for  choosing to become a 
banker rather than, for instance, an engineer, are things  like market 
manipulation becoming ... acceptable-a sexier sort of crime?  
Tyler Cowen: Finance is still where the big money is, though  for fewer 
people than before.  This is perhaps slightly encouraging, as I  would rather 
see more top minds go into science, engineering, and other fields.  But in 
finance a smart young person can make a mark quickly, more so than in  most 
sciences or businesses (tech aside) so finance will remain a big draw for  
young talent. 
Oilprice.com: As the "debate" over climate change has taken  on polarizing 
political proportions, it's better to ask an economist. How can  climate 
change affect the economy?  
Tyler Cowen: We’re going to find out, I have to say. 
Tyler Cowen is the Holbert L. Harris Professor of Economics at George Mason 
 University and General Director of the Mercatus Center. He received his 
PhD in  economics from Harvard University in 1987. His book _The Great 
Stagnation: How America Ate the Low-Hanging  Fruit of Modern History, Got Sick, 
and 
Will (Eventually) Feel  Better_ (http://mercatus.org/greatstagnation)  was 
a New York Times best-seller. He was recently named  in an Economist poll as 
one of the most influential economists of the last  decade and last year 
Bloomberg BusinessWeek dubbed him “America’s Hottest  Economist.” Foreign 
Policy magazine named him as one of its “Top 100 Global  Thinkers” of 2011. He 
co-writes a blog at _www.marginalrevolution.com_ 
(http://marginalrevolution.com/)  and has  recently inaugurated an on-line 
education project, 
_MRUniversity.com._ (http://mruniversity.com/)

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