



Aaron wrote:So much for the "We can grow our economies and lower energy use" idea huh?

So much for the "We can grow our economies and lower energy use" idea huh?


smiley wrote:So much for the "We can grow our economies and lower energy use" idea huh?
annual change in gasoline consumption (source IEA)
France -5.1%
Germany -3.5%
Italy -3.8%
USA +1.7%
http://omrpublic.iea.org/currentissues/full.pdf
We can lower our energy consumption while keeping our economies running.
The latest "flash-estimate" shows that growth in the first quarter has slowed down to 1.9%


smiley wrote:So much for the "We can grow our economies and lower energy use" idea huh?
annual change in gasoline consumption (source IEA)
France -5.1%
Germany -3.5%
Italy -3.8%
USA +1.7%
http://omrpublic.iea.org/currentissues/full.pdf
We can lower our energy consumption while keeping our economies running.


A LEADING economist yesterday predicted that the European Central Bank (ECB) will take dramatic action by the end of the year and cut lending rates by up to half a percent.
Thomas Stolper, a global markets economist with Goldman Sachs, said he expects a rate cut in the third quarter after evidence of weakening industrial activity across the eurozone.
His view was at odds with those expressed in separate surveys of economists carried out by Reuters and Bloomberg, while Bank of Ireland economist Dr Dan McLaughlin said the ECB will raise rates later this year - as soon as evidence emerges that growth in the eurozone is back on track.
And a survey of economists carried out by Reuters showed that most economists have pushed back the timing of a eurozone interest rate rise, with only a slim majority expecting the European Central Bank to hike this year, due to shaky economic growth and tame inflation.
All 72 economists surveyed between April 25th and 27th said the ECB will leave its key lending rate at a historic low of 2pc when it meets on May 4.
Making his case, Mr Stolper cited fresh economic data which he said suggests European manufacturing shrank in April for the first time since mid-2003, when the ECB last cut interest rates. ECB policy makers have kept their main interest rate at 2pc since June 2003, the lowest for the 12 nations sharing the euro in six decades, to stoke growth.


Much of the oil problem is about misallocation of resources:


Some economists are even talking about an ECB rate cut before the end of the year because of the anaemic growth rates.

Aaron wrote:Much of the oil problem is about misallocation of resources:
WW...
Crosslink our big fight into this thread. Same topic...
I thought that might be easier than going for each others jugular again
(I would but I don't remember which one it was)

energy does is not directly equal to money, a point which I stand by. You always get crashes and booms in classic economics anyway.




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