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Foreign Policy, Monetary Policy, and Gas Prices
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
The burning
issue in Washington today is high gas prices, and it wont
go away anytime soon. Americans are not happy about paying $3 per
gallon at the pump, and they want something done about it.
But price controls
wont work, and allegations of price gouging and windfall
profits amount to nothing more than congressional grandstanding.
No government official or politician is fit to define a fair
price for gas or a fair profit for oil companies. This
is not the Soviet Union. The last thing we need is centralized government
planning when it comes to our precious energy supplies.
The price of
oil, like everything else, depends on supply and demand. What we
really need to focus on is how government keeps the supply of refined
gasoline too low. This is not as easy as demanding price controls,
and does not fit into 30-second sound bites. But as with so many
issues, we must peel away decades of government interference to
really understand the problem.
Most people
understand that federal restrictions on exploring, drilling, and
refining domestic oil have made us dependent on various questionable
Middle East governments. We should expand this into a greater understanding
of how American foreign policy increases gas prices here at home.
Before the war in Iraq, oil was about $28 per barrel. Today it is
over $70. Iraq was a significant source of worldwide oil, but its
production has dropped 50% since 2002. Pipeline sabotage and fires
are routine; we have been unable to prevent them. Furthermore, the
general instability in the Middle East created by the war causes
oil prices to rise everywhere.
The sooner
we get out of Iraq and allow the Iraqis to solve their own problems
the better. Soaring gasoline prices are one giant unintended consequence
of the war, pure and simple.
Even so, many
war hawks are seriously agitating for an attack on Iran another
major supplier of worldwide oil. They are not concerned one bit
about the impact such an attack would have on the wallets of average
Americans; their obsession with regime change in Iran trumps all
common sense. But let me be clear: An attack on Iran, coupled with
our continued presence in Iraq, could hike gas prices to $5 or $6
per gallon.
We also must
understand the effect monetary policy has on gas prices. The price
of gas, like the price of all things, goes up because of inflation.
And inflation by definition is an increase in the money supply.
The money supply is controlled by the Federal Reserve Bank, and
responds to the deficits Congress creates. When deficits are excessive,
as they are today, the Fed creates new dollars out of thin air to
buy Treasury bills and keep interest rates artificially low. But
when new money is created out of nothing, the money already in circulation
loses value. Once this is recognized, prices rise some more rapidly
than others. Thats what we see today with the cost of energy.
If we want
to do something about gas prices, we should demand greatly reduced
welfare and military spending, a balanced budget, and fewer regulations
that interfere with the market development of alternative fuels.
All subsidies and special benefits to energy companies should be
ended. We also should demand a return to a sound commodity monetary
system.
And in the
meantime, lets eliminate federal gas taxes at the pump. That
alone would save Americans 18.4 cents per gallon. By contrast, oil
companies only make about 10 cents per gallon. So maybe its
government thats being greedy.
Oil
prices are at a level where consumers reduce consumption voluntarily.
The market will work if we let it. But as great as the market economy
is, it cannot overcome a foreign policy that is destined to disrupt
oil supplies and threaten the world with an expanded and dangerous
conflict in the Middle East. And it cannot overcome a monetary policy
destined to inflate our dollars into oblivion.
May
9, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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