“Total Chief Skeptical about Future Oil Supplies”:
As a finance student and oil consumer, I find your economic analysis of the current oil situation insightful and provocative. After reading this post and learning about the debate regarding oil output and prices, I am not surprised that the experts participating in the Oil and Money conference are hesitant to predict the future cost of crude oil. As you imply when you write “predicting oil prices is a mug’s game,” the forecasts tend to be incorrect due to the volatility of the market. Despite my lack of confidence in price estimations, I still find that certain market predictions are critical in determining the oil industry’s future, which leads me to disagree with your point about production factors. You write that above-ground factors such as “the lack of capacity in the industry to develop resources sufficiently quickly” are more important than the below-ground factors such as the geology of the oil reserves. While a short term analysis of the current oil crisis would merit such a conclusion, the below ground factors you describe as unimportant will ultimately have a greater long term impact on consumers and the economy. Currently, scientists estimate the depletion of the world’s oil supply using th

“Talk About Timing”:
After extensively researching the effect of rising oil prices on the economy, I appreciate your intelligent and clear analysis of the current Chinese oil crisis. Although almost every national economy is suffering from crude oil costs of nearly one hundred dollars per barrel, developing countries seem to have the hardest time adjusting to the price increases. From your post, it is obvious that China is no exception to the rule—only after severe shortages and civil unrest has the government finally agreed to establish price controls. While this is a step in the right direction, the effect of these policies is still unknown and you point out that “depending on how China adjusts these policy instruments, the raising of the price ceilings could ease some pressure on the demand for oil.” However, even if the measures prove to be immediately successful, I am concerned that subsidies and price controls will not effectively reduce the Chinese economy’s long term dependence on crude oil. Today, scientists predict that the world’s oil supply will be depleted by 2050 and this has major implications for developing nations that rely heavily on oil to spur their rapid economic growth. In the future, do you expect emergent economies, such as China, to suffer major setbacks in the absence of oil, or can investment in alternative fuel sources feasibly generate similar financial growth?