THE CONNECTION BETWEEN OIL PRICES, DEBT LEVELS, AND INTEREST RATES

"The peak in oil prices took place in July 2008. When we look at US mortgage amounts outstanding, we find that home mortgage debt hit a peak on March 31, 2008 ... When we look at consumer credit outstanding, we find that consumer credit outstanding hit a maximum on July 31, 2008 ... If oil prices spike, clearly discretionary income falls ... If interest rates spike, suddenly goods that are bought with credit become more expensive ... The primary approach to keeping interest rates low has been Quantitative Easing (QE). US QE was begun in late 2008 and has been kept in place since ... The money from QE also helps encourage investment in marginal enterprises, such as in shale gas drilling ... While we hear much about the growth in oil from shale formations in the US, this is mostly acting to offset falling production elsewhere ... It is this lack of growth in oil supply together with the high price of oil that is holding back world economic growth. As stated previously, very low interest rates are needed to even maintain the level of economic growth we have now ... In a growing economy, it is possible to repay debt with interest. But once an economy flattens, it is much harder to repay debt ... The problem we have now is that a rising supply of cheap oil is no longer possible. Most of the cheap-to-extract oil is already gone. Instead, the cost of extraction keeps rising, but wages are not going up enough for people to afford the high cost of extracting oil (even with super-low interest rates). The unfortunate outcome is that oil prices are now too low for many producers ... Because oil prices are too low for companies doing the extraction, we really need higher oil prices. But if oil prices are higher, they will put the world back into recession. Interest rates are already very low–it is not possible to lower them further to offset higher oil costs. We are reaching the edge of how much central banks can do to hold economies together ... As we have seen, rising interest rates will bring an end to our current equilibrium, by raising costs in many ways, without raising salaries ... A rise in the cost of extraction of oil, if it isn’t accompanied by high oil prices, will also put an end to our equilibrium, because oil producers will stop drilling the number of wells needed to keep production up.  If oil prices rise, this will tend to put the economy into recession, leading to job loss and debt defaults."

Zum Artikel von Gail Tverberg, erschienen auf Our Finite World (21. Mai 2014) »