March 27 2013 |
CFR Tells Good News About Commodity Prices
Energy, Security, and Climate ... CFR experts examine the science and foreign policy surrounding climate change, energy, and nuclear security. Bad News for Pessimists Everywhere: Malthus Was Wrong ... There is a tempting intuition to the idea that the real prices of non-renewable goods like coal, iron ore, or oil should rise, more or less, forever. It's an easy argument to make, and it sounds right ... Supply of the stuff is limited—once it's gone, it's gone. So, this argument goes, as we exhaust our resources, we'll have to mine, drill, or otherwise get our hands on it somehow but it will get more and more expensive to do so, because we'll have exhausted the best stuff. Left to exploit ever-greater quantities of ever-more-marginal deposits, prices will rise indefinitely into the future. – CFR blogs Dominant Social Theme: It's running out. Free-Market Analysis: The Council on Foreign Relations deservedly or not has a reputation in "conspiracy circles" for being an elite facility that has considerable influence on US policies. But leaving that aside, the CFR often provides support for free-market arguments. Such is the case in this article, excerpted above. The article does us the favor of pointing out an Economist analysis that shows commodity prices are trending down historically. You would not know this from many articles written in the mainstream media and even in the alternative media. Left alone, untrammeled by regulations and price manipulation, commodities SHOULD go down in price over time as technology becomes more efficient and discoveries become more prevalent. Here's more from the article:.
This is a good and pertinent analysis. There is so much that is financially illiterate in the news media these days and this story is a ringing affirmation of a different perspective. On a related note, we would like the CFR blog to expand its analysis to money stuff itself. The faith in free markets that is so nobly presented regarding commodities is not shared apparently when it comes to currency dissemination throughout the Western world. If the marketplace is so effective at creating prosperity within the context of commodities why isn't the Invisible Hand trusted when it comes to banking? Central bankers fix the price of money and its volume as well. They are constantly involved in the very kind of price-fixing this article criticizes and makes clear doesn't work. Our question as always is why there seems to be such a disconnect between appreciation of the free market properties and its ability to efficiently manage money? Free banking is infinitely preferable to the series of catastrophes that central banking provides. Since CFR blogs seems to be a launching pad for a renewed appreciation of market forces we look forward increasingly to an investigation of the central banking model itself and how it has managed to invade nation-states around the world. Conclusion: Price fixing never works, as economists agree. So why is it practiced by central bankers everywhere?
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