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What Congress Can Do About Higher Gas Prices
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
Gasoline prices
are soaring and the American people are angry. They want something
done about itnow!
$100 rebate
checks to American motorists wont cut it, nor will mandatory
mileage requirements for new vehicles. Taxing oil profits will only
force prices higher. But there are some very important things we
can do immediately to help.
First: We must
reassess our foreign policy and announce some changes. One of the
reasons we went into Iraq was to secure oil. Before the Iraq war
oil was less than $30 per barrel; today it is over $70. The sooner
we get out of Iraq and allow the Iraqis to solve their own problems
the better. Since 2002 oil production in Iraq has dropped 50%. Pipeline
sabotage and fires are routine; we have been unable to prevent them.
Soaring gasoline prices are a giant unintended consequence of our
invasion, pure and simple.
Second: We
must end our obsession for a military confrontation with Iran. Iran
does not have a nuclear weapon, and according to our own CIA is
nowhere near getting one. Yet the drumbeat grows louder for attacking
certain sites in Iran, either by conventional or even nuclear means.
An attack on Iran, coupled with our continued presence in Iraq,
could hike gas prices to $5 or $6 per gallon here at home. By contrast,
a sensible approach toward Iran could quickly lower oil prices by
$20 per barrel.
Third: We must
remember that prices of all things go up because of inflation. 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.
Exploding deficits,
due to runaway entitlement spending and the cost of overseas engagements,
create pressure for the Fed to inflate the money supply. This contributes
greatly to the higher prices were all paying at the pump.
If we want
to do something about gas prices, Congress should greatly reduce
federal spending, balance the budget, and eliminate regulations
that interfere with the market development of alternative fuels.
All subsidies and special benefits to energy companies should be
ended. And in the meantime lets eliminate federal gas taxes
at the pump.
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.
August
1, 2006
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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