Robert Reich: The Gas Wars
And nothing energizes Republicans like rising energy prices. Last week House Speaker John Boehner told Republicans to take advantage of voters looming anger over prices at the pump. On Thursday House Republicans passed a bill to expand offshore drilling and force the White House to issue a permit for the Keystone XL pipeline.
In fact, oil prices are rising for three reasons none of which has to do with offshore drilling or the XL pipeline. The first, on the supply side, is Irans decision to cut in oil exports to Britain and France in retaliation for sanctions put in place by the EU and United States. Irans threat to do this has been pushing up crude oil prices for weeks.
The second, on the demand side, is rising hopes for a global economic recovery which would mean increased oil consumption. The American economy is showing faint signs of a recovery. Europes debt crisis appears to be easing. Greeces pending bailout deal is calming financial nerves on both sides of the Atlantic, and the Bank of England and European Central Bank are keeping rates low. At the same time, China has decided to boost its money supply to spur growth there.
Neither of these would have much effect were it not for the third reason overwhelming bets of hedge funds and other money managers that oil prices will rise on the basis of the first two reasons. ... Funny, I dont hear Republicans rail against speculators. Could that have anything to do with the fact that hedge funds and money managers are bankrolling the GOP as never before?
But thats okay. The gas wars may come to a screeching halt before too long, anyway. So many bets are being placed on rising oil prices that the slightest hint the speculators are wrong almost any sign of expanding supply or declining demand will set off a sharp drop in oil prices similar to the record one-day fall on May 5 of last year.
http://robertreich.org/post/17980272636