Short Supply, Not Middle East Tensions, Push up Oil Prices (GateStone Institute) by David P. Goldman 04/06/12)
Source: http://www.gatestoneinstitute.org/2995/oil-supply-prices
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"Right now the key thing that is driving higher gas prices is
actually the world´s oil markets and uncertainty about what´s going
on in Iran and the Middle East, and that´s adding a $20 or $30
premium to oil prices," President Obama said March 23. It´s complete
and utter nonsense. Oil is trading in lockstep with expectations for
economic growth, as reflected in stock prices. There´s not a shred of
evidence that geopolitical uncertainty has added a penny to the oil
price. Obama´s $20 to $30 per barrel risk premium is a number pulled
out of a hat, without a shred of empirical support. In effect, the
President is blaming Israel for high oil prices.
On April, 3, Vice-President Biden blamed higher oil prices on "talk
about war with Iran"; fear that Iran might "take out the Saudi oil
fields and Bahraini oil fields"; the Arab Spring movement; "war in
Libya"; the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood; and a potential for
unforeseen political unrest, such as "chaos in Russia." It´s all
complete and utter nonsense. Oil prices are going up because the
world economy is consuming more oil and supply has not increased to
meet the demand – in part because the Obama administration
discourages North American energy development, most recently by
stopping the proposed Keystone pipeline from Canada. It´s easier to
blame foreign phantoms for high gas prices at the pump than the
administration´s business-killing politics
One might argue that the market should price strategic risk into the
oil price, but the fact is that markets are not especially good at
assigning prices to possible events whose probability can´t be
measured.
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