Puppet
State Brought Down By Price Controls?
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
If you read
the financial press, and are watching Iraq news, the warnings are
quite ominous.
Writes the
LATimes:
"Iraq's government has sharply raised the price of fuel and other
petroleum products this month, sparking discontent and protests
and worrying international observers who say the increases could
hurt millions of poor Iraqis and throw the country into further
turmoil."
Says the Guardian
via AP: " Long lines formed at gas stations in Baghdad on Friday
as word spread that Iraq's largest oil refinery had shut down in
the face of threats against truck drivers, and fears grew of a gas
shortage."
Says Reuters:
"Falling oil exports and fuel shortages, especially of gasoline,
have raised the level of popular frustration with successive Iraqi
governments since Saddam's rule. Iraqis queuing at gasoline stations
in Baghdad said they feared the Baiji closure would make their lives
even more miserable."
And get this:
Iraq's on-the-books oil exports are at their lowest level in two
years. No oil leaving and no oil coming in at least on the books.
This is the stuff of which genuine revolutions are made.
Remarkable
isn't it? What the rebels, insurgents, and terrorists have yet to
accomplish the end of US puppet rule in Iraq may yet be accomplished
by bad energy policy. And this policy was not only imposed after
the US invasion but has been continued in the years since, leading
to an ever-worse catastrophe.
The mystery
to explain is why a country that is incredibly oil rich with the
2nd largest oil reserves in the world would face a massive
shortage of all oil products. If you knew nothing more than this
detail, and you knew something about the history of economic debacles,
you might guess: price controls. You would be right.
From what I
can gather from public sources, the government assumes ownership
of all oil in the country. That hardly makes the Iraqi situation
unique in the region, but what is unique is the combination of subsidies
and price controls that led gasoline to be fix-priced at 5 cents
per gallon until very recently.
You don't have
to be an economist to know what the results of this policy would
be. Not only does it lead to overconsumption. The number of vendors
willing to distribute the stuff in the open market collapses. What’s
left is bought in Iraq and sold to neighboring countries at a profit.
Thus does a
policy designed to make oil cheap for all result in the bizarre
world in which a country full of oil underground would not have
any of the stuff available above ground.
Actually, you
can try this trick with any product. Price sugar, eggs, socks, or
harddrives with a price ceiling of 5 cents and see what happens.
Enforce the rule with vigor and you will empty the shelves and clean
out the country at least in the above-board economy. The smarties
will be making money through smuggling and arbitrage outside the
law zone. The rest of the population will have to do without.
The shortage
problem was obvious at this time last year, when The Economist reported
that drivers were waiting in lines up to 24 hours for gasoline.
It got to the point where Iraq was having to import oil! Finally
realizing that affairs had gone very wrong, the Iraqi government
decided to do something about it.
The something
that it should do is sell the wells and refineries and distribution
centers to anyone who will buy them. Eliminate subsidies. Eliminate
price controls. That would drive the price to regional standards
with no gas lines and only minor grumbling among consumers.
Instead, the
government put another US-linked member of the elite in charge of
the oil ministry, and promptly boosted the price to 65c, and set
it to rise to $1.00 on the government's own schedule. But that does
not alleviate shortages, for even a spread of a few cents between
black market prices and official prices can keep smuggling alive.
It might end
lines, not by satisfying happy consumers but by discouraging away
anyone not prepared to pay the government-set higher prices.
None
of this addresses the major security problem. The pipelines keep
getting blown up. The state can't protect them. They are another
obvious candidate for privatization. Let private dollars pay for
the protection of private property.
And yet there
is the major overarching problem that any kind of privatization
will be seen as an imperial venture. It can only give both the US
and the capitalist system a bad name. If reform is going to come,
it can only come from within.
Sadly
that leaves no real answer to the problem immediately facing Iraqis.
The only option for the US is not to continue economic and political
control in any form, but to immediately pull out. That would be
a surprise winter gift that the US could give all Iraqi people.
If the US doesn't
leave now, it could be forced to leave later. Never underestimate
the effects of bad economic policy. It could be the very thing that
finally brings down a failed attempt to control a country through
imperial means.
December
31, 2005
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2005 LewRockwell.com
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