Wednesday, June 25, 2008

My Dream of $200 a Barrel Oil Really a Nightmare?

Deutsche Bank is warning that if oil hits $200 a barrel, it will “break the back of the global economy”. Wow! Those are some pretty harsh and terrifying words. Still, I’m not really convinced. Oil has doubled in price in the last year, and to get to $200, we only need another 50% increase over what we have now.

While prices rising by another 50% would likely reduce imports of products shipped across the ocean, this would hardly break the back of the global economy. We may be entering a period of greater regional trade at the expense of international trade, but I don’t see this as a bad thing. It will take some reorientation of many economies, but opportunities in new sectors should serve to counterbalance losses in others.

Beyond a reorientation of trade patterns, there are imbalances in the global economy which need to unwind, particularly in America, and between America and its foreign creditors. A reduction in cross oceanic imports would help to reduce these imbalances in a more manageable way than creditor countries one day simply deciding to cut America off, or to demand much higher interest rates.

The international trading system has proven remarkable resilient to crises in the past, and I don’t believe that $200 a barrel oil will bring the whole thing tumbling down now. Will it create problems? Sure. Will people feel worse off? Probably. Will the efforts of concentrated minds of our political (maybe) and business (likely) leaders get us past this obstacle? I’m optimistic.

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