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Oil Shock: Trying to make the
complex simple
www.pennlive.com, May 16, 2008
By Herb Field
People want answers. They want to
be able to point to something and say that's what caused it. That's
as true with the current pain at the pump or higher prices at the
supermarket as it is with any other development that impacts our
lives. Profiteering oil companies. The shrinking value of the
dollar. Speculators. OPEC. Rising consumption in China and India.
Wait a second. Better be careful on
that last explanation.
Aside from the fact that too many
Americans live in a cocoon that insulates them from most of what's
happening in other parts of the world, it probably should not come
as too great a shock that there are people in both India and China
who object to a country with 5 percent of the world's population
consuming close to a quarter of its oil blaming someone else for a
jump in oil prices.
A seemingly innocent comment by
President Bush's earlier this month in Missouri about India's
growing middle class and worldwide rising food prices prompted
"scorn" in New Delhi, The New
York Times reported May 14. Here's what the president
said: "When you start getting wealth, you start demanding better
nutrition and better food, and so demand is high, and that cause
prices to go up."
One prominent Indian, Pradeep S.
Mehta, secretary general of the center for international trade,
economics and the environment at CUTS International in New Delhi,
according to The Times,
said that if Americans slimmed down to the weight of middle-class
Indians, "many hungry people in sub-Saharan Africa would find food
on their plates." He went to say that the money Americans spend on
liposuction to remove excess fat could be used to feed victims of
famine.
These are not isolated sentiments.
Many people in other countries are offended by what they see as
America's gluttony in consuming the planet's finite resources and
its insensitivity in failing to respond to such global challenges as
climate change and international food shortages. Many Americans
think some malevolent force is behind high oil and gas prices. Many
foreigners say we are the problem. And they aren't happy about it.
The American way of life does
require the expenditure of an inordinate amount of the world's
resources. Half of the planet's 6.6 billion people live on less than
two dollars a day. Earth simply does not have the resources to
permit the rest of mankind to live on the scale of calorie intake,
housing and mobility enjoyed by the average American.
But that's today. The way things
are headed it should be obvious that America's excesses are not
sustainable. We are
part of the problem. We need to do more with less. And there isn't
really a choice. Those looking for a simple answer need to confront
the reality of a world of a still-growing population - a projected
additional 2.5 billion people by 2050 - and its finite,
ever-shrinking resources from oil to food and much in between.
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at:
http://blog.pennlive.com/
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