Let's
Blame Speculators
by
Walter E. Williams
Recently
by Walter E. Williams: Smugglers
As Heroes
Here's a non-rocket
science question: If you expect a reduced harvest of wheat, corn,
rice or any other commodity some time in the future, what would
be the wise thing to do about your consumption today? I bet that
the average person would answer: Consume less now so that more will
be available in the future.
But how in
the world can people be encouraged to consume less now? Enter the
futures market, which consists of a worldwide group of millions
upon millions of traders, often called speculators. Speculators,
betting on a future shortage, buy up wheat, corn and rice today
in the hopes of making money selling it for a higher price when
the bad harvest hits. As speculators buy more and more wheat, corn
and rice, they drive up today's prices. As today's price gets higher,
people consume less, but more importantly, people do the intelligent
thing without bureaucratic edicts. The vital role of the futures
trader, or speculator, is to allocate goods over different time
periods. And, it's not just wheat, corn and rice that must be allocated
over time but all commodities including oil.
There's no
guarantee that speculators will make money. They might guess wrongly.
For example, they might buy wheat now at $8 per bushel, expecting
to make a killing in November at $12. Weather predictions might
have been wrong and instead of a reduced harvest, there's a bumper
crop driving November wheat prices down to $4 per bushel. That would
make the speculator's $8 investment worth $4.
If we don't
like commodity speculation, we could easily outlaw it. That way,
for example, even though there might be every indication of a reduced
fall wheat harvest, today's price of wheat wouldn't rise. We could
consume wheat today and not fret about fall.
President Obama
has asked the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate whether
Wall Street speculators could be manipulating oil markets. If Obama
could convince other nations to put an end to worldwide oil speculation,
we might be able enjoy $2 per gallon gas and ignore Middle East
conflicts that might impact heavily on future oil supplies.
White House
and congressional attacks on oil speculation do not alter the oil
market's fundamental demand-and-supply reality. What would lower
the long-term price of oil is for Congress to permit exploration
for the estimated billions upon billions of barrels of oil off our
Atlantic and Pacific Ocean shores, the Gulf of Mexico and Alaska,
not to mention the estimated billions, possibly trillions, of barrels
of shale oil in Wyoming, Colorado, Utah and North Dakota.
Some politicians
pooh-pooh calls for drilling, saying it would take five or 10 years
to recover the oil and won't solve today's problems. Nonsense! I
guarantee you that if permits were granted to all of our oil sources,
we would see a reduction in today's prices.
Why? Put yourself
in the place of an OPEC member knowing there's going to be a greater
supply of U.S. oil in five or 10 years, which might drive oil prices
to a permanent $20 or $30 per barrel. What will you want to do now
while oil is $120 per barrel? You would want to sell.
OPEC's
collective efforts to sell more would put downward pressures on
current oil prices. The White House, U.S. Congress and environmental
wackos, by keeping our oil in the ground, are OPEC's staunchest
ally. I wouldn't be surprised at all if we discovered OPEC reciprocity
in the forms of political contributions to congressmen and charitable
donations to environmental groups.
In the wake
of higher gasoline prices, the only intelligent thing that Obama
has called for is an end to $4 billion in annual taxpayer subsidies
to oil companies. To get that done, he has an uphill bipartisan
fight on his hands. Oil companies buy off both Republicans and Democrats
in order to receive government handouts and special treatment.
May
4, 2011
Walter
E. Williams is the John M. Olin distinguished professor of economics
at George Mason University, and a nationally syndicated columnist.
To find out more about Walter E. Williams and read features by other
Creators Syndicate columnists and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page.
Copyright
© 2011 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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