Is the Iraq War for Oil? -dont read of you hate iraqwar discussions

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Is that what it all comes down to? I kind of suspected revenge of Bush at first, but now I wonder... If Hussein is a threat based on just being dangerous, who will we attack next? Take your pick! Lets bomo Cuba, Northern Korea, Iran, etc etc etc.

Mike Hanle y (mike), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:10 (twenty-three years ago)

bomos away!

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:13 (twenty-three years ago)

interesting theory

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:13 (twenty-three years ago)

Maybe Bush should just have a "fireside chat " and say " look everyone, you and me love driving. We need to drive. now lets get that fuckin oil, and NO MORE COMPLAINING! Afterwards, we can steal Frances' wine! HEHEHEHEH!!! "

Mike Hanle y (mike), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:15 (twenty-three years ago)

but France's wine has COW BLOOD in it!

James Blount (James Blount), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:18 (twenty-three years ago)

LETS FIRE BONOBOS AT IRAG! HUSSEIN WILL HAVE APECOCK IN EVERY HOLE BEFORE HIS NIGHTLY GYRO!

Mike Hanle y (mike), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:19 (twenty-three years ago)

If it was about oil, we would've invaded Venezuela (sp?) long ago.

hstencil, Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:19 (twenty-three years ago)

well, it's not clear that we didn't try to depose Chavez.

But the war (which hasn't happened yet, as it happens) is not about oil.

gabbneb (gabbneb), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:22 (twenty-three years ago)

Well, I think that might cause more alarm than an easy target like Hussein. Doesn't the Saddam -Bush thing seem like a cowboy after a funny western villian. complete with mustache? but he should be named " bad Bart" . Who knows, maybe we WILL invade Venezuela, its not like we have left South America be all these years

Mike Hanle y (mike), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:23 (twenty-three years ago)

Is it about distraction? Bush recently told governor's he did t want to listen to their problems. http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story2&cid=513&e=3&u=/ap/20030223/ap_on_go_ot/governors

Mike Hanle y (mike), Sunday, 23 February 2003 08:25 (twenty-three years ago)

the war will at least partly about oil. Its also about distracting the US public from the situation at home and it will in part be about removing Saddam and replacing him probably with some other form of compliant dictator.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 09:18 (twenty-three years ago)

I'd say, of course it's about oil, but very indirectly. Not in the "NO BLOOD FOR OIL" kind of (1) invade Iraq (2) take oil (3) don't pay for oil -- sort of way. The US didn't take their oil during the last invasion, althogh I guess the "food for oil" program allows some pretty cheap gas to get out of Iraq. It would also be cheaper to buy their oil rather than having a war to make sure the west can pay market prices for it. I think it's more about ensuring longer term cheap oil from a variety of competing mid-east sources. Regional stability too, but only as far as that ensures the free flow of oil, not out of altruism. I don't know.

Skottie, Sunday, 23 February 2003 09:24 (twenty-three years ago)

And of course, to test the U.S. Strategic-Bonobo defense program

Skottie, Sunday, 23 February 2003 09:25 (twenty-three years ago)

There is no such thing as long term oil supplies, that's the point.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 09:27 (twenty-three years ago)

Back in 1990, after Saddam invaded Kuwait, and before the Gulf War, he had a 'fireside chat' with the US ambassador. Apparently he said he would ensure a. Supply of oil to the US and b. He would act as an 'enforcer' in the region. Much to his amazement the US who'd at best been turning a blind eye to what was going on or at worst supporting him didn't accept his blandishments and went to war to liberate Kuwait.

As for why we're going to war now I think two other reasons which haven't been mentioned. Unease at the way that Saudi Arabia is turning more fundamentalist (and anti-US), which will dry up a supply from there. Also the feeling that Dubya's Dad didn't finish the job in 91 and son's going to finish it for him.

Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Sunday, 23 February 2003 11:56 (twenty-three years ago)

This war is happening because the world changed on December 13th, 2000.

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 23 February 2003 12:53 (twenty-three years ago)

Possibly this is a war to avoid the euroisation of oil trading. Something that will fuck up the US economy, apparently. Iraq currently sells its oil in Euros and it makes sense for the middle east and Russia to do the same. If oil is no longer denominated in Euros then the US will be in trouble.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:02 (twenty-three years ago)

don't follow

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:03 (twenty-three years ago)

If the US controls Iraq then they can probably out a stop to Opec euroising oil sales and that will stop russia doing the same.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:11 (twenty-three years ago)

"If oil is no longer denominated in Euros then the US will be in trouble."

did you get a word wrong in this sentence then? or am i v.dim this morning?

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:14 (twenty-three years ago)

Sorry should read

If oil is no longer denominated in Dollars then the US will be in trouble.

Yes I did just read it in the observer today, but I have quite close ties to the oil industry and this has be bubbling under for a while.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:15 (twenty-three years ago)

Saudi, I think is one of the keys here. US are afreaid of a domino effect if Saudi becomes a full blown fundamentalist state and that by democratising Iraq ( in the long term, ha) it can act as a brake in other areas in the region (and indeed Saudi).

Billy Dods (Billy Dods), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:16 (twenty-three years ago)

Possibly by taking Iraq the US can shore up the Al Sauds without actually being in the 'holy places'.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:17 (twenty-three years ago)

''If oil is no longer denominated in Dollars then the US will be in trouble.''

and this could be the actual reason why germany and france oppose the war (rather than that they are actually listening to ppl).

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:18 (twenty-three years ago)

well whatever the reasons for the US invading iraq we can prob agree that it isn't abt any humanitarian concern.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Very probably, certainly it must be somewhere near the top of Chirac's list, as are oil interests in iraq and skeletons in chiracs own cupboard. It'll be on Schröder's list too but the main reason why Germany is opposed is that he just won, just barely, an election on an anti-war platform.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:22 (twenty-three years ago)

I recommend you read this article in the Observer, Two Men Driving Bush Into War.

http://www.observer.co.uk/iraq/story/0,12239,901115,00.html

It says the Project for the New American Century a think tank of Bush advisors including Cheney, Wolfowitz and 'another old friend, former Pentagon Under-Secretary for Policy under Reagan, Richard Perle' (who appeared on C4's 'America On Trial' last night for the defence, and lost the case with the studio audience) published a document in early 2001 which 'pondered that what was needed to assure US global power was 'some catastrophic and catalysing event, like a new Pearl Harbor''

Their policy on the middle east is that Islam 'was one of the world's great empires' which had 'never reconciled... to the loss of power and dominion'. In response, Karl Rove said, 'the United States should recognise that, although it cannot expect to be loved, it can enforce respect'.

Momus (Momus), Sunday, 23 February 2003 13:35 (twenty-three years ago)

has t.blair ever been *directly* challenged abt the rove-wolfowitz project? (which is after all hardly secret...)

i wd assume his answer - in his mind if not publicly - has to date been that he is politically and tactically clever enough, not to say morally correct enough, to sway the bush administration away from the more dodgy and dangerous perceptions of their backroom ideologues, so as to accede to his perceptions (which are rooted in a very difft attitude to the UN and the norms of international law) in the name of shoring up the widest support

but forcing him to comment on this specific aspect out loud wd be interesting — my intuition is that he has a very low opinion of bushco, which he keeps to himself bcz coming clean wd of course totally put the cat among the pigeons, diplomacy-wise

(one of the reasons i dislike the "bush's poodle" trope is that — much as blair may inwardly seethe at this — it actually gives him useful rhetorical space: i wd far rather he were routinely pressed on the fairly obvious but still mainly implied differences between him and bush)

mark s (mark s), Sunday, 23 February 2003 14:26 (twenty-three years ago)

A good article on the euro-ization of oil:

http://www.feasta.org/documents/papers/oil1.htm

Also, the US is now considering military intervention in Colombia to rescue the two CIA agents captured by FARC. Yet more war...

fletrejet, Sunday, 23 February 2003 14:35 (twenty-three years ago)

v informative. thanks for the link.

Julio Desouza (jdesouza), Sunday, 23 February 2003 14:43 (twenty-three years ago)

It's clearer than the observer piece.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 14:51 (twenty-three years ago)

I reckon that euro-isation of oil might be a lot closer is Chavez hadn't suffered the US backed coup and the oil workers strike. He was driving the strengthening of OPEC until these things got in the way.

Ed (dali), Sunday, 23 February 2003 14:54 (twenty-three years ago)

When people deride the whole pursuit as misadventure for oil, do they even understand that spending a quarter of a trillion dollars to liberate and occupy Iraq until a new govt takes hold for some oil is hardly economical sensible?

"Does anyone really believe that ordinary Iraqis gain or have gained for decades, any benefits from that country's oil? The evidence of Saddam's ransacking of his country's oil resources is available for anyone with the inclination to discover it. He has not agonised about moral dilemmas while he and his cronies have bled the Iraqi people white in the systematic plunder of their oil resources.
The circumvention of the UN sanctions on oil sales outside the terms of the1991 ceasefire agreement and the 1996 UN Food for Oil agreement have become legion- and the main beneficiaries are Saddam, his Ba'athist clique and its cronies. In this week's New York Times an Iraqi functionary described it (privately of course) as "gangster business, pure and simple".
But the breach of these recent post-Kuwait agreements represents nothing more than business as usual for Saddam. According to forensic accountants Kroll & Associates, since 1981 Saddam is estimated to have diverted about $US1 billion from oil revenues for his personal use. Even if this estimate is a gross exaggeration, it places the 'blood for oil' argument in perspective.
Compared to Saddam, if the whole of the Iraqi oil industry was operated by Texaco, the average Iraqi's life would be incomparably improved. Indeed, if the former executives of Enron were given the task, their rapaciousness would seem touchingly amateurish when compared with the Corleone style of Saddam.
The present state of the Iraqi oil industry is far more complex than the 'blood for oil' crowd admit. An investment of $30-40 billion is necessary in order to rehabilitate existing wells and develop new oil fields. The international community should insist on Saddam's departure as a condition of implementing any plan to bring these resources to the point where they can deliver real benefits to all Iraqis.
It should be clear to all by now that the continued existence of the Saddam regime and the delivery of benefits derived from its oil resources to Iraqis are mutually incompatible."
~ Jim Nolan

DavidM (DavidM), Sunday, 23 February 2003 22:55 (twenty-three years ago)

anyone in the Uk see Correspondent tonight? seemed very balanced (apart from being totally anti-Saddam of course) and taught me some new things (things i maybe shouldve known already such as how Iraq was formed by the Brits, assassination of Crown Prince in '58 leading to era of dictatorships based on fear, the U.S. fear that Iraq's extremist factions could turn as nasty as Iran's leading them to pull back once Kuwait had been recovered etc.) but the focus was on how the Iraqi Opposition Committee (group of exiled long-standing political adversaries of Saddam) is gaining more confidence, plus further logical explanations for it being not about oil, all of which gives the pro-war argument a boost really - it at least convinced me more of the real depth of the Saddam regime's brutality using a variety of sources, giving the impression that with this amount of opposition, frustration, resentment and plotting going on, Saddam's days truly are numbered

stevem (blueski), Sunday, 23 February 2003 23:11 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't know whether this war is about oil or not but, if Iraq did not have large oil reserves, I'm sure it wouldn't happen. War is very expensive and I'm sure that Bush is planning on paying for the war with Iraqi oil once he's got control of it.

Amarga (Amarga), Sunday, 23 February 2003 23:22 (twenty-three years ago)

>When people deride the whole pursuit as misadventure for oil, do they
> even understand that spending a quarter of a trillion dollars to
> liberate and occupy Iraq until a new govt takes hold for some oil is
> hardly economical sensible?

No one here is arguing this. Its not merely an oil grab - it is part of a strategy to break OPEC and forstall the economic collapse of the US. When we control Iraq's oil, we control its rate of production. If OPEC falls out of line and does something the US doesn't like, such as switching to euros, the US can boost production in Iraq and flood the market with cheep oil. This is the true value of Iraq's reserves - it is a tool to control ALL the world's oil production.

fletrejet, Sunday, 23 February 2003 23:24 (twenty-three years ago)

Is war really that expensive? I heard someone say that the UK made a small profit out of the Gulf War (if you accept that the armed forces are being funded anyway) because Saudi Arabia gave us so much money as 'thanks'/compensation afterwards.

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 24 February 2003 01:11 (twenty-three years ago)

And if half of us die it will take the pressure off the NHS.

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 01:12 (twenty-three years ago)

The reason I began this thread is I listened to a CD of a Noam Chompsky lecture, which basically states the reason we probably are going to war now is for the oil, and not to give it to the Iraqi people , but to gain strategic control. They dont necessarily even want oil to be cheap for us, they just want control. It does seem like a strange thing , for Bush to suddenly pop up and say " Now we are going to go to war with Iraq and oust saddam". I mean, invasion of Kuwait was one thing, but this new attack seems so strange I just keep trying to suss it out. I mean ,its like if some guy suddenly came over and said " I'll give you $1,000 for those shoes." I would want to knwo why

Mike Hanle y (mike), Monday, 24 February 2003 03:48 (twenty-three years ago)

It's like if some guy suddenly came over and said 'Are you wearing underpants? If you're wearing underpants, I'll hit you. And if you refuse to show me the underpants I think you're wearing, I'll hit you too. Which is it to be? Hit you, or hit you? And while I'm hitting you for wearing the underpants I know you're wearing, give me all your money.'

Momus (Momus), Monday, 24 February 2003 08:50 (twenty-three years ago)

Momus, are you going commando?

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 08:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Or do your underpants pose a potential threat to the safety of humanity?

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 08:59 (twenty-three years ago)

I am fully co-operating with the underpants inspectors. Please don't hit me.

Momus (Momus), Monday, 24 February 2003 09:21 (twenty-three years ago)

The question is how far the missile can shoot.

MarkH (MarkH), Monday, 24 February 2003 09:22 (twenty-three years ago)

Momus has underpants of mass destruction, but will he use them?

stevem (blueski), Monday, 24 February 2003 11:02 (twenty-three years ago)

lets hope its not a dirty bomb

stevem (blueski), Monday, 24 February 2003 11:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Is war really that expensive? I heard someone say that the UK made a small profit out of the Gulf War (if you accept that the armed forces are being funded anyway) because Saudi Arabia gave us so much money as 'thanks'/compensation afterwards.

In the first gulf war, the US made damn sure that other countries paid for it. Mostly the countries of the Arabian peninsula but also Japan if I remember correctly. That also meant that the US government had to follow the priorities of those countries. The Saudi government didn't want to see the overthrow of Saddam Hussein so the war had to be stopped after driving the Iraqi army out of Kuwait. The US encouraged an uprising in the south of Iraq but then failed to provide the people with promised support. No Middle Eastern government is supporting, let alone funding, this new war so where's the money for it going to come from if not from the spoils of war?

I also find it very absurd to issue an ultimatum to the Iraqis: GIVE UP YOUR WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION OR WE'LL BOMB YOU WITH OUR WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION. Which country would give up their weapons when faced with imminent invasion?

Amarga (Amarga), Monday, 24 February 2003 11:58 (twenty-three years ago)

It's gonna cost Momus a fortune in pants.

*runs away*

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 11:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Japan was forking out for Momus' pants ten years ago, and Japan will fork out for them now.

Matt DC (Matt DC), Monday, 24 February 2003 12:09 (twenty-three years ago)

If he buys them at M&S Britain could make a profit from this war after all!

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 12:10 (twenty-three years ago)

I think it was Pat Rabbitte who said he wouldn't be averse to giving Saddam asylum. With a surname like that, what can you expect?

The tabloids here ran lots of silly stories about what Saddam could get up to if he did land on our emerald shores.

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 14:48 (twenty-three years ago)

i want to read those stories Lara! can you give me a gist?

stevem (blueski), Monday, 24 February 2003 14:51 (twenty-three years ago)

i just realised i've never wondered what Irish tabloids are like until now

stevem (blueski), Monday, 24 February 2003 14:51 (twenty-three years ago)

I think I threw the 'newspaper' out yesterday. If I manage to fish it out of the bin, I will post the details. I remember that one of the digs was that he would depose Michael Flately as Lord of the Dance as he had led the weapons inspectors on such a merry jig...

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 14:58 (twenty-three years ago)

(I buy my pants from Tati, so Chirac will benefit.)

Momus (Momus), Monday, 24 February 2003 15:31 (twenty-three years ago)

I get mine from Tatu.

The bidding starts at 20 quid...

Lara (Lara), Monday, 24 February 2003 15:42 (twenty-three years ago)

where do the french fit into your underpants analogy? Are they a random passerby who says "We will let the underpants inspectors do their job. There will be no hitting." And Turkey is a guy who is like " Maybe you can use this stick to hit him if you give me thirty dollars." And North Korea is this guy a bit down the road who is saying " IM WEARING WOMEN'S UNDERPANTS< AND THEY ARE POISON!!"

Mike Hanle y (mike), Monday, 24 February 2003 16:06 (twenty-three years ago)

It's about the oil in the sense that if the middle east didn't have oil it wouldn't be important or dangerous in any way at all, probably.

Stuart, Monday, 24 February 2003 16:34 (twenty-three years ago)

Can anyone give an answer why is the US controlling the oil reserves is worse than it being under the control of Saddam Hussain (persuming he doesn't set fire to the oilfields like he did during his retreat from Kuwait).
This war for oil argument is a nonesense but it seems like it's the only foothold the chattering-classes Left who have taken to desperately looking for any excuse to oppose a liberation that any self-respecting liberal person should be clamouring for. Instead they drift around, rudderless and inneffective. Doing nothing more than snickering Dubya jokes to each other and organising pointless 'antiwar' day outs where the self-righteous dupes can huddle together. This is the state the modern Left finds itself in, opposing the overthrowing of the brutal, anti-freedom, anti-culture regimes of Milosovic, the Taliban and Saddam Hussain. What an absolute fucking disgrace.

DavidM (DavidM), Monday, 24 February 2003 19:30 (twenty-three years ago)

>Can anyone give an answer why is the US controlling the oil reserves is worse than it being under the control of Saddam Hussain
>(persuming he doesn't set fire to the oilfields like he did during his retreat from Kuwait).

Because controlling the oil reserves will come at a great cost to the US. Empire is expensive. We would have to maintain a puppet government in Iraq, which would make the people of Iraq, and consquently the entire middle-east, hate us, moreso than they already do. The rest of the industrialized world will hate us, because we will make them buy oil with worthless amercian dollars at the price we set. We will be alone in the world. Furthmore, we will ignore the fundamental weakness of the US economy. Remember, we are a debtor nation. If our creditors ever decided to call in their loans, we are fucked, which is why its just not smart to antagonize the whole world.

>This war for oil argument is a nonesense but it seems like it's the only foothold the chattering-classes Left who have taken to desperately
>looking for any excuse to oppose a liberation that any self-respecting liberal person should be clamouring for.

If the US is to control Iraqi oil production, then the Iraqi government would have to therefore be a puppet regime, therefore its hardly a "liberation".

>This is the state the modern Left finds itself in, opposing the
> overthrowing of the brutal, anti-freedom, anti-culture regimes of
> Milosovic, the Taliban and Saddam Hussain. What an absolute fucking
> disgrace.

I think its perfectly hilarious that the Right sneered at "nation-building" Clinton and now think there is some sort of divine calling for them to get rid of every dictator in the world. I don't support most interventions in other countries governments, because historically it usually led to something worse.

fletrejet, Monday, 24 February 2003 19:59 (twenty-three years ago)

Momus has convinced me, and won me over with his argument. I shall stop wearing underpants immediately. (I'd mention that I'm not wearing any now, but some of you might get overexcited.)

Martin Skidmore (Martin Skidmore), Monday, 24 February 2003 20:27 (twenty-three years ago)

The fact is Iraq's oil reserves should be in the hands of the Iraqi people, not Saddam, not US.gov, not US big oil.com, not france etc.

Ed (dali), Monday, 24 February 2003 20:38 (twenty-three years ago)

But they'd get filthy.

N. (nickdastoor), Monday, 24 February 2003 22:42 (twenty-three years ago)

>>Because controlling the oil reserves will come at a great cost to the US. >>

Yes, it will since we will undoubtedly be the ones who have to pay to protect them. But it is pretty much official policy now that the US will ask the UN to set up a government in Iraq.

>>worthless American dollars

They're so worthless that the dollar is virtually the world's standard of measurement.

>>Furthmore, we will ignore the fundamental weakness of the US economy. Remember, we are a debtor nation. If our creditors ever decided to call in their loans, we are fucked>>

This statement is absurd and void of factual support. Our debt load is tiny (only 8% of our federal budget, a negligible percentage of the GDP) and is completely inconsequential in global economic affairs. If our creditors called in our loans--whoa, most of our "loans" are with OUR OWN BANK--the FEDERAL RESERVE. NOT other countries. True, the US has a trade deficit with other countries, but it's not the same as an IOU. It just means that (simplistically speaking) we import more than we export.

Really, there are better ways to debate the consequences of war other than making a a bunch of baseless comments.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 01:52 (twenty-three years ago)

>Yes, it will since we will undoubtedly be the ones who have to pay to protect them. But it is pretty much official policy
>now that the US will ask the UN to set up a government in Iraq.

Protect them? No, I mean the cost of protecting US from THEM.

>They're so worthless that the dollar is virtually the world's standard of measurement.

Yes, the dollar has been the gold standard, so to speak, of currency since WWII. Do you think that it is eternally ordained by God to be so? No, in fact now there is a serious rival to the dollar, the euro. And the euro is looking better and better. Read the article i referenced earlier:
http://www.feasta.org/documents/papers/oil1.htm
which explains why the dollar is on shakey ground. So perhaps I exaggerated with "worthless", but the dollar is seriously overvalued.

>This statement is absurd and void of factual support.

"On latest estimates, its [the US's] net liabilities to the rest the world are more than $2.7 trillion, nearly 30 per cent of GDP, a scale of indebtedness associated with basket-case economies in Latin America. "

http://www.observer.co.uk/Print/0,3858,4591686,00.html

All the nonsense about helping the people of Iraq, stopping terrorism and WMD, is nothing but pretext. Its a war fought by people too scared to face new economic realities, and instead to keep things how they are with violence.


fletrejet, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 02:16 (twenty-three years ago)

now that the US will ask the UN to set up a government in Iraq

I find this hilarious.

"We will browbeat you and browbeat you and BROWBEAT YOU to pass the resolution! Oh, and help us set up a new government afterwards, please?"

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 02:17 (twenty-three years ago)

>> in fact now there is a serious rival to the dollar, the euro. And the euro is looking better and better.>>

The euro is actually a stronger currency right now than the dollar. I'm aware of that--it passed the dollar in June of 2002 I think. Your boy Nunan is just one of many who has speculated (hoped?) that in the near future more OPEC countries will switch to it on the strength of its current exchange rate.

But hanging the hopes of the Euro outlasting the dollar in OPEC and overtaking it elsewhere will require something other than a disaster in the oil economy. It will also require economic growth by the EU--something that is projected to be lower than that of the US again this year by the IMF and others. And with the main economic drivers of the EU like Germany and France faring poorly against competitors like the US and India, the euro's currently favorable trading status may be short lived. Indeed, if the EU does not show growth this year it is almost certain that the dollar will in fact rebound against the euro.

Unlike Will Hutton, I wouldn't be running around bragging how much the US needs Europe--at least until I at least casually considered the other side of his argument, which unsurprisingly he didn't spend any time on.

That being, while Europe can crow about how it enjoyed an increase in the favorable trading account with the United States last year, it didn't translate to improving economic growth or higher living standards. At all. In fact, despite the US trade gap growing, we grew our economy both externally and internally. You may not think that a 3.3% increase in growth was anything to write home about in the US, but it's 3 times higher than the EU "enjoyed." What's more, owing to the way these things are calculated, imports subtract from GDP growth while exports add to it. So without Americans buying Philips plasma TVs and BMWs, American growth would be higher and European growth nonexistent or negative. In other words, America's "unsustainable" demand for foreign products is the only thing sustaining Europe's lackluster economy. The same thing can be said about the Japanese economy.

People like Nunan and Hutton claim that "financing" the U.S. current account deficit requires that foreigners purchase some $1.5 billion in U.S. assets a day, and warn darkly of the time when that need cannot be met. But the current account deficit is by definition the inverse of net capital inflow. So it can very easily be argued that U.S. assets are in such demand, even with Treasury yields at historic lows and after three down years in the U.S. stock market, that Americans have to find $1.5 billion a day worth of foreign goods just to spend all the money that's coming in.

Finally, as for this statement:
>>In latest estimates, its [the US's] net liabilities to the rest the world are more than $2.7 trillion, nearly 30 per cent of GDP, a scale of indebtedness associated with basket-case economies in Latin America>>

It's totally misleading, which is why it is absurd. That statement doesn't consider, for example, the net liabilities that the rest of the world has to the US (which are above a trillion dollars.) It doesn't mention that our service to our debt is less than 5% of our GDP. It's just the net liabilities, as if the net assets don't even matter. But Hutton wasn't concerned with context--he was only trying to find a way to criticize the US economy so he played fast and loose with the facts. You cannot find one credible economist in the world who would say that the debt of the US is anything at all similar or as limiting as what is found in some third world countries.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 03:52 (twenty-three years ago)

don that logic about imports/exports etc. is near orwellian in brilliance. down is up, debt is profit, etc.

In other words, America's "unsustainable" demand for foreign products is the only thing sustaining Europe's lackluster economy. The same thing can be said about the Japanese economy.

For fuck's sake. America's import of foriegn goods is a sign of weakness because it represents total outflow of currency which would otherwise be invested in American capital and instead finds its way into foriegn capital. i.e. Japan/Europe make profit from selling goods to the U.S., and this "sustains" their economies in the sense that they're effectively outcompeting U.S. companies (i.e. their better efficiency etc. sustains their economies by enabling them to poach u.s. markets).

it can very easily be argued that U.S. assets are in such demand, even with Treasury yields at historic lows and after three down years in the U.S. stock market, that Americans have to find $1.5 billion a day worth of foreign goods just to spend all the money that's coming in.

Money isn't coming in for crying out loud, or at least capital isn't. Currency and consumer goods are coming in, which is something else entirely.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 06:11 (twenty-three years ago)

The only people who benefit from a "strong dollar" are Americans or people using dollars outside the U.S. For the majority (sadly) of Americans who never leave their borders, a "weaker dollar" translates into much more attractive prices for export goods. Even relatively small changes in the value of the dollar vs. the euro vs. the yet translate into a large change in the attractiveness of the export products of each respective economy.

The eurozation of oil argument is very interesting, however. It seems, as in most arguments, each side hyperbolizes to make the point, and insodoing backs into an unsupportable corner. Certainly what could be disastrous to the US economy is a sudden shift to Petro-euros, with consequent freeing of uncountable dollars on the world economy. Competition between the euro and the dollar will probably benefit both currencies/related economies. Competition always does.

Assuming some kind of smooth transition, cheaper dollars combined with the far more productive US economy would probably hurt Europe greatly.

As for a reason for going to war, it just sounds too complex for people like Geo. W. But there must be some reason? Or maybe not when you have a cabinet full of people who want a war, it's probably not hard to justify one.

Skottie, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 06:37 (twenty-three years ago)

yet=yen=yeti=abomonable snow man=abdominal snowman

Skottie, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 06:38 (twenty-three years ago)

is the war in Iraq for Oil?

Here are the facts:

Take the War on Iraq IQ Test:

1. Q: What percentage of the world's population does the U.S. have? A: 6%

2. Q: What percentage of the world's wealth does the U.S. have? A: 50%

3. Q: Which country has the largest oil reserves? A: Saudi Arabia

4. Q: Which country has the second largest oil reserves? A: Iraq

5. Q: How much is spent on military budgets a year worldwide? A: $900+ billion

6. Q: How much of this is spent by the U.S.? A:50%

7. Q: What percent of US military spending would ensure the essentials of life to everyone in the world, according the the UN? A: 10% (that's about $40 billion, the amount of funding initially requested to fund our retaliatory attack on Afghanistan).

8. Q: How many people have died in wars since World War II? A: 86 million

9. Q: How long has Iraq had chemical and biological weapons? A: Since the early 1980's.

10. Q: Did Iraq develop these chemical and biological weapons on their own? A: No, the materials and technology were supplied by the US government, along with Britain and private corporations.

11. Q: Did the US government condemn the Iraqi use of gas warfare against Iran? A: No

12. Q: How many people did Saddam Hussein kill using gas in the Kurdish town of Halabja in 1988? A: 5,000

13. Q: How many western countries condemned this action at the time? A:0

14. Q: How many gallons of Agent Orange did America use in Vietnam? A: 17 million.


Now you should know the Answer

bob, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 09:45 (twenty-three years ago)

The US dollar and its purchasing power in the world is largely sustained by the fact that countries need dollars to buy energy. Think of dollars as just another comodity. Money is just a short hand to enable transactions to take place it has no intrinsic value.

Most countries are energy importers so they need dollars. So they have to sell things to the US (or get loans from the IMF/World Bank). Becuase the demand for dollars in the world is so high this keeps the price of dollars in goods relatively high which allows the US to import a great deal at advantageous prices and to 'print' dollars because they are in demand. If oil was denominated in euros then the demand for euros would be higher than for dollars so dollars would buy less and so to sustain the import levels in the US there would have to be inflation ('printing' more dollars) or a large increase in economic output.

Because Europe at the moment does not have the luxury of a high demand for Euros fiscal policy is a great deal tighter which is why growth is lower. Europe has an advantage because of this. Since the euro is weaker its purchasing power is less so europe has to rely more on goods produced within its borders, which is why the EU and the Euro were set up in the first place.

Anyway what I am saying is that Euroisation of oil would hurt the US a great deal.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 11:37 (twenty-three years ago)

The Euroisatin of OPEC would most definitely hurt the dollar, and probably the US economy (as for "a great deal" that's harder to assess.) But it would be significant, especially if it was sudden.

Also, you can't attribute growth being lower in Euro entirely to the tighter supply of the currency; the tighter supply has kept it trading higher than the dollar for the past eight months, which has attracted significant foreign investment into the EU, which bolstered the economy. Foreign security investment has dropped in the US over the past couple of years, which was a key reason the economy here was flat.

And for fuck's sake Sterling, the US trade deficit (and its positives/negatives) is much more complicated than you (or I, actually) describe in this setting, as is the discussion of economics in general. You can barely get two economists to agree on anything, and my entire point is that pundits like Nunan and Hutton only elaborate on one aspect of the discussion in order to sell their opinion. Which is fine, that's what we all do. But from the beginning it seems like people came into the war "discussion" with their minds made up. The War Side is kill happy and the Peace Side is dove happy, with no middle ground.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 12:25 (twenty-three years ago)

Fiscal policy is not soley the money supply, it encompases the whole stimulus/break system used to control modern economies. The main reason the US an UK economies are doing better than Europe's is main due to consumer debt funded spending. This is tailing of now but in the UK at least the stimulus is being maintained by goverment debt funded spending on public services which should help us over the turbulence.

Bush is cutting taxes at the wrong time. As the US economy weakens he should be increasing government spending to stimulate the economy. OK so he's stimulating the arms industry but it has to be wider than that. This is just the time to be spending on infrastructure and the like.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 12:31 (twenty-three years ago)

I'd actually assert that there are monetary policy and fiscal policy are two different policies altogether (however they may entwine after implementation), especially in the US since Congress has so much control over fiscal policy and the main architect of monetary policy is the Federal Reserve Board. Monetary policy is not the sole engine to stimulate or break the economy; it can't be done without the mechanisms of taxation, for example, and the Federal Reserve has no direct control over taxation.

Bush may be cutting taxes at the wrong time, but in fact he has proposed more government spending (including defense, obviously.) But removing the tax on dividends is also likely to stimulate the economy in the short run, so that isn't necessarily a bad idea.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 13:21 (twenty-three years ago)

everyone's in debt so re-inflate the bubble!!

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 13:23 (twenty-three years ago)

Stimulating the economy does not equal stimulating the stock market. Sure everyone with equities does well and it helps companies to raise capital by floating if they are at that stage in the game, but its does little to stimulate actual growth in terms of manufacturing, jobs in all sectors, productivity. GDP is only one indicator of how well an economy is doing. GDP growth with people being laid off or having their pay packets squeezed does not equal a healthy economy in my book.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 16:43 (twenty-three years ago)

interesting discussion- does anyone know the last time the US ran a trade surplus?

lawrence kansas (lawrence kansas), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 16:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Don't be so old fashioned.

N. (nickdastoor), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 17:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Not for a long long time.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 17:02 (twenty-three years ago)

Assuming some kind of smooth transition, cheaper dollars combined with the far more productive US economy would probably hurt Europe greatly.

But the entire argt. is that the current strength of the dollar is balanced angainst a weakening US economy. Furthermore, trade-deficit is not directly correlated to strength of the dollar.

Also, cheaper dollars combined with more productive US economy = someone's got to bear the cost and as Bush's tax cut shows it won't be the rich.

Mainly the point of the article as I take it is one I agree with -- that monetary policy quirks can produce odd circumstances but will tend to normalize, and that the U.S. economy still has a bubble effect from these quirks which means it stands to normalize further downwards in the coming period.

& Don I find this fairly incidental to any discussion of war with Iraq to be honest, but more important in understanding what's generally going on with the U.S. and world economy right now.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 17:13 (twenty-three years ago)

howabout: opening up middle east markets as per brit empire's opium wars in china in 19th c?

(i tht of that a coupla days ago) (but have had no time to think abt it very much: opium was a commodity the chinese authorities were clamping down on, despite small but intense underground demand, a loss to emeregent brit markets => the aggressive de-islamicisation of the middle east wd expand the market for US cultural product, currently resisted socially, despite small but intense underground demand)

this may not fly, but i'm interested in what ppl think

mark s (mark s), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 17:20 (twenty-three years ago)

Although arguably immoral, defense spending is an excellent stimulus to an economy, far better than the kinds of "stimulus packages" that presidents are always touting. In the current era, defense spending equates primarily to aerospace and high-tech R&D and manuf. This in turn = high wage jobs requiring specific skills and often education. The availability of jobs requiring specific skills and education then provides an incentive for people to acquire the skills and education. These high wage earners aren't struggling to survive, they're buying cars and gadgets and going on trips and stimulating the economy over and over. The cycle is extremely productive.

Oh, except for the Iraqis/Columbians/Vietnamese/Guatamalans/Panamanians or whoever gets to see the rockets red glare personally. It's terrible for them.

Skottie, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 17:44 (twenty-three years ago)

Of course, instead of spending the money to create yet more ways to kill people, the government could spend it on scientists/engineers to develope renewable sources of energy, cures for diseases, etc.

fletrejet, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 18:04 (twenty-three years ago)

Shhh, Fletrejet. You're giving it away! Now they'll ALL want that!

Ned Raggett (Ned), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 18:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Sure, that would be nice, but then the terrorists would have won.

Skottke, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 18:12 (twenty-three years ago)

trade-deficit is not directly correlated to strength of the dollar

Yes it is. For example, in the mid to late 1990s (notably when Japan was really in the tank) the appreciated dollar stimulated U.S. import demand further and curbed its exports. The strength or weakness of the dollar has a direct bearing on the trade deficit for the US.

And tax decreases do not necessarily equal lower government expenditures (there are many examples of this throughout the past 40 years.) The federal government (in the US) can stimulate the economy in several ways: a) release money from the Fed (i.e. lower interest rates), increase government expenditures, lower taxes, or a combination of any and all. The Fed is so paranoid of deflation right now (and some economists like Paul Krugman argue that we're already in a period of deflation) that the first choice is not an option unless things get a lot worse. The second and third choices are being pursued.

As for monetary policy vs. the bubble and any current lingering effects, the jury is still out on that one. You can find economists who will argue it either way. Several that I am most familiar with claim that the pending nature of a war over the last 18 months has had more of an effect than anything else on the global economy. Thus, I really don't see how you can see any war activity (whether it's talking about it or gearing up for it or actually doing it) as incidental to discussions of the economy. Or vice versa. Furthermore, all of the primary players on the world's stage will be affected if the United States/UK invade Iraq, so it seems further relevant to discuss each country's financial interest in the war or not the war.

And Skottie, I think you would have a hard time arguing that defense spending by the federal government (at least in the US) is immoral. It's one of the few explicit spending directives in the Constitution.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 19:15 (twenty-three years ago)

The problem is yes that changing the dollar changes balance of trade but you can't just change the dollar without causing a million other things which also change strength of economy, trade deficit etc.

Looking at this in terms of markets rather than capital expenditure makes things really impressionistic.

Also of course the anticipated war affects the economy but my gripe is if we look for simple economic explanations for the war.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 19:33 (twenty-three years ago)

I don't think I get what you're trying to say Sterling re: markets vs. capital expenditure.

My only point about the war affecting the economy is that as of right now the only consensus (if there is one) is that just anticipating it is affecting things like capital expenditure a great deal and dragging down the US economy. As for the actual war, no one can say whether or not it will be good or bad for the economy because no one knows and historical data is not very reliably comparable.

We don't need to look for simple economic explanations for the war ("Is It For Oil") but it is the subject of this thread.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 19:59 (twenty-three years ago)

The thing is bush is cutting the wrong taxes. If he wanted to use tax cuts as a stimulus he should cut taxes for the people who spend every penny they get if he wants to get capital moving round the economy. The rich are going to sit on any money they get through tax breaks because most investments carry too much risk at the moment.

Much better to spend money on improving a country, on infrastructure on improving the facilities for doing business.

I reckon this war will not be short and that oil prices will skyrocket, which is good for the UK but bad for the US.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 20:09 (twenty-three years ago)

When the "rich" (and it would probably help me if someone could define what that is) "sit" on their money it is not in a sock drawer where their money will lose value. It is usually in something that will bring a return on equity, such as a bank, money market, securities, real estate, etc. When money is put into some form secure investment it is effectively returning it to the economy. A "rich" person's secure assets will then be used by the bank, financial institution, etc. to fund other investments such as venture capital, public utilities, etc. Plus, when those investments earn money, the investors most likely get taxed again. Also, I might add that the "rich" tend to have more disposable income which they tend to spend at a higher clip than someone who is maxed out on credit cards, renting an apartment, and needing two jobs to get the bills paid. People with more money tend to have proportionately more time to spend it, which they do. But it's their retained assets--securities and the like--that offer the most potency to the economy. That's most likely why Bush is advocating a system wide tax cut.

But I do agree with you that this war will probably be much longer than we think, complete with a bunch of terrorist type activities after we think it's over. Oil prices are already climbing in anticipation of the fun & games.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 20:51 (twenty-three years ago)

The problem is if there's no significant expansion in capital outlay towards industry (& not defense which squanders capital and is a net drain on the economy) then how do you get it? Cheapening money can have some effect but decisions are made on ratio of marginal return mainly, not supply of capital (which isn't taken as an investment but a loan). I.e. more loans and less investment which will tend to prop less profitable companies up because their capital is cheap which will just postpone the crisis and drag out a period of stagnation.

(nb: I am not advocating any particular fiscal policy here, just acting as a doomsayer and arguing that fiscal policy can't do very much in this circumstance, regardless)

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 20:58 (twenty-three years ago)

Fiscal policy (and monetary policy) can in fact do a lot in this circumstance, though me being a doomsayer myself I would say what they can do is negative. For example, doubling the capital gains tax would be disastrous, as would increasing income tax levels. And if we want to join Japan in the deflation tank Greenspan could drop interest rates by 2%. I really don't trust Congress (who control fiscal policy) to do anything good in terms of stimulating the economy as everything they do is tied into getting reelected.

I'm still a little unclear about what you're trying to say about the expansion/investment of capital. Cheapening money most certainly affects decision making--if you did any business circa the mid-70s you know all about expensive money. In fact, the cost of money (i.e. capital) in this discussion is implicit in figuring the margin of return whether you are investing or loaning. Investment is nothing more than a hedge that your assets will be better someplace than they currently are.

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 21:39 (twenty-three years ago)

The point is that there isn't that much scope for increasing the money supply. Knock off that 2% form intrest rates and we will be in the Japan situation. I'm saying no tax cuts, at all and controlled defecit spending is what's required.

Ed (dali), Tuesday, 25 February 2003 21:55 (twenty-three years ago)

US Congress + "controlled deficit spending" = not fucking possible

don weiner, Tuesday, 25 February 2003 22:06 (twenty-three years ago)

Okay. two points.

first: cheapening of money keeps poorly-performing businesses able to sustain themselves longer coz they can get better loans. but they'll still die eventually, just more painfully. essentially it dilutes the value of well-performing business to prop up the less well performing ones, from a strict price/earnings standpoint. if the money isn't going to go into new capital investment (which it won't in this period) its throwing good money after bad. the only difference between expanding money through cutting taxes or social welfare spending or cutting rates or etc. is that the former means the rich foax get the first cut off the top, thus increasing the wealth gap (while in defense spending a vast portion goes into a wealth sink of useless [from a human-need standpoint] military hardware).

second: the whole trade issue. i think i wasn't clear here. of course a changed money supply changes balance of trade -- the problem is i thought the converse was being argued above.

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Wednesday, 26 February 2003 05:59 (twenty-three years ago)

It seems like you are reducing the economy to a zero-sum sort of situation, in as much as you assert there is a limited amount of capital where cheap can only come at the expense of expensive.

This is certainly not always the case, especially in an expanding economy (which we have been in for over a year now.) To wit, all companies die eventually. Cheap money may in fact allow some companies to wither on the vine further but it also sustains some non-established companies to weather out initial start-up periods, for example. And maybe IBM has been slowly dying for the last 20 years, but not many people would say that cheap money gives companies time to adapt to changing markets and economies, to acquire and sell units of business that may evolve the core interest. Your post sort of asserts that a P/E perspective only sees loans as a source of operating revenue, which I don't agree with. I'm not sure if that's what you were trying to say or not.

But as I've said, one of the main reasons capital investment is down in the US is because it has been going to Europe and Asia where the return has been better; funds have shifted to international securities because the US economy has been stagnant. True, the fed has loosened the money supply to combat the negative effect this has had on the US economy, but the influence on the war has deterred capital spending despite the cheap money supply.

don weiner, Wednesday, 26 February 2003 11:58 (twenty-three years ago)

The problem is holding equities does not equal capital investment in most cases. Buying and selling traded equities is buying and selling a share in captital invested at float and its devlopment since then. Sure its a way of raising capital at float and you get some rights issue but if bush really wanted to stimulate the economy he would give tax breaks to capital investement by corporations or to Venture capital.

giving money to the rich and hoping they will invest or spend in the right places is just dumb.

Of course I'd much rather coperations went coop or at least part owned by workers but then I'm just a socialist ranter.

Ed (dali), Wednesday, 26 February 2003 12:33 (twenty-three years ago)

Every time capital gains tax cuts get offered up it gets shot down immediately but it is in effect a capital investment tax cut.

Holding equities in effect can easily equate to capital investment; if equity is being held it most certainly is probably being used for capital investment, if not for use by the corporation then by the holding company for use to fund more enterprise. Buying and selling equities is speculative towards more earnings.

Where does this assumption come from that the rich will not invest their money properly? If they didn't inherit their wealth, then the logical assumption is that a rich person invested wisely and it grew. If they inherited wealth, it is perfectly logical that they will invest wisely--certainly if for no other reason than the fact that wealthy people typically can afford good accountants or financial advisors.

If you read "The Millionaire Next Door," what you will find is that the primary reason there are millionaires in this country is precisely because those people tend to NOT squander their resources. Large net wealth nearly always equates to prudent investing. The rich keep getting richer because the rich keep doing what they did to get rich, or if they flat out inherited riches they didn't squander it (like most lottery winners typically do.)

I agree that coop is nice but it sure as shit isn't helping me out with my company stocks.

don weiner, Wednesday, 26 February 2003 15:11 (twenty-three years ago)

I'm not saying the rich don't invest wisely but its a pretty terrible and indirect way of stimulating the economy. Targeted Capital gains tax breaks would be much more effective.

Ed (dali), Wednesday, 26 February 2003 15:19 (twenty-three years ago)


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