A Bad
Moon on the Rise. . .
by
Eric Peters
EricPetersAutos.com
Theres
a bad moon on the rise in the form of upward creeping gas
prices.
Unleaded regular
is surging toward $4 per gallon again the same highs that
preceded and which arguably triggered the current
economic catatonia. If it happens again, though, the effects are
probably going to be even worse. A man on his feet can usually take
a sucker punch, or at least recover from it. But if hes already
on the ground and you kick him in the head, hes done-for.
$4 per gallon
gas could do exactly that to the U.S. economy whats
left of it.
This time,
unlike last time, unemployment is already nearly 10 percent
(closer to 20 percent, if you go by the old way of measuring that
includes people whove stopped even trying to find work).
This time,
unlike last time, our too big to fail industries
including the car companies have already failed once and
its doubtful the government (excuse me, the Fed) can
print more funny money bailout bucks without triggering either a
currency devaluation or runaway inflation, maybe both.
$4 per gallon
gas is going to mean a lot more than just paying an extra $15 to
fill-up the car. It will mean everything is going to get proportionately
more expensive, from the food on your plate to the stuff down at
the mall. The tag-team of rising fuel costs and increasingly worth-less
Federal Reserve Notes could seal the deal this time.
People who
weathered the first crisis dont have the reserves built up
to handle Round Two.
Frosting their
already precarious balance sheet with another $100 per month
just for gas, not counting higher prices for everything else,
too will push many of them over the edge.
Expect unemployment
to crest 10 percent officially and possibly
20 percent in the real word.
Ford is okay
right now and GM at least has a pulse. But neither can survive
a repeat of the crisis of 2008, which was sparked by $4 per gallon
fuel, which in turn caused millions of people to say sayonara to
their V-8 SUVs, formerly the golden calf of the U.S. car industry.
The industry
has come about, ditched SUVs as their profit center and worked feverishly
to bring forth new economy cars and also next generation hybrids
and even electric cars. But the fly in the pie is that unemployed
people or people fearful of becoming unemployed
do not buy new cars anymore than they buy new houses or new anything.
If 10–20 percent of the American public is out of the game already
and the next 10–20 percent is sweating bullets about their
financial situation and wondering whether theyll still have
a job next month imagine what thats going to do to
new car sales. And what that will do to the car industry.
And what that
will do to the economy.
Think about
the millions of suburban communities with houses whose value has
already deflated by 20–30 percent, in part because people stopped
buying houses an hours commute from their jobs. These communities
and 1-hour commutes were viable when it only cost
$30 to fill up. But when your monthly fuel bill becomes a second
mortgage and youre also paying 10–20 percent more for everything
from food to utilities, a condo in the city seems a lot more appealing.
Wave goodbye
to the burbs. To quote Don Corleone: They are going to sleep
with the fishes.
Bottom line
I doubt the country can take $4 gas. It almost dropped the
curtain last time and last time, we had jobs, equity in our
homes and 401ks, things to fall back on. Now, were facing
a repeat with our backs already up against the wall. Theres
nowhere to go and no help in sight.
If you havent
taken some steps to prepare for whats coming, understand that
time is short.
Batten down
the hatches. It could be about to get rough.
Reprinted
with permission from the
EricPetersAutos.com.
February
26, 2011
Eric Peters
[send him mail] is an
automotive columnist and author of Automotive
Atrocities and Road Hogs (2011). Visit his
website.
Copyright
© 2011 Eric Peters
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