Sunday, June 1, 2008

Truth or Consequences




I read this article on the way to the AP Reading in Daytona Beach. The electric car idea is very interesting. Any thoughts on this? Could a candidate get elected in this country by telling the American people, what Friedman calls, the truth?

Mr.K

By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN
Imagine for a minute, just a minute, that someone running for president was able to actually tell the truth, the real truth, to the American people about what would be the best — I mean really the best — energy policy for the long-term economic health and security of our country. I realize this is a fantasy, but play along with me for a minute. What would this mythical, totally imaginary, truth-telling candidate say?

For starters, he or she would explain that there is no short-term fix for gasoline prices. Prices are what they are as a result of rising global oil demand from India, China and a rapidly growing Middle East on top of our own increasing consumption, a shortage of “sweet” crude that is used for the diesel fuel that Europe is highly dependent upon and our own neglect of effective energy policy for 30 years.

Cynical ideas, like the McCain-Clinton summertime gas-tax holiday, would only make the problem worse, and reckless initiatives like the Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep offer to subsidize gasoline for three years for people who buy its gas guzzlers are the moral equivalent of tobacco companies offering discounted cigarettes to teenagers.

I can’t say it better than my friend Tim Shriver, the chairman of Special Olympics, did in a Memorial Day essay in The Washington Post: “So Dodge wants to sell you a car you don’t really want to buy, that is not fuel-efficient, will further damage our environment, and will further subsidize oil states, some of which are on the other side of the wars we’re currently fighting. ... The planet be damned, the troops be forgotten, the economy be ignored: buy a Dodge.”

No, our mythical candidate would say the long-term answer is to go exactly the other way: guarantee people a high price of gasoline — forever.

This candidate would note that $4-a-gallon gasoline is really starting to impact driving behavior and buying behavior in way that $3-a-gallon gas did not. The first time we got such a strong price signal, after the 1973 oil shock, we responded as a country by demanding and producing more fuel-efficient cars. But as soon as oil prices started falling in the late 1980s and early 1990s, we let Detroit get us readdicted to gas guzzlers, and the price steadily crept back up to where it is today.

We must not make that mistake again. Therefore, what our mythical candidate would be proposing, argues the energy economist Philip Verleger Jr., is a “price floor” for gasoline: $4 a gallon for regular unleaded, which is still half the going rate in Europe today. Washington would declare that it would never let the price fall below that level. If it does, it would increase the federal gasoline tax on a monthly basis to make up the difference between the pump price and the market price.

To ease the burden on the less well-off, “anyone earning under $80,000 a year would be compensated with a reduction in the payroll taxes,” said Verleger. Or, he suggested, the government could use the gasoline tax to buy back gas guzzlers from the public and “crush them.”

But the message going forward to every car buyer and carmaker would be this: The price of gasoline is never going back down. Therefore, if you buy a big gas guzzler today, you are locking yourself into perpetually high gasoline bills. You are buying a pig that will eat you out of house and home. At the same time, if you, a manufacturer, continue building fleets of nonhybrid gas guzzlers, you are condemning yourself, your employees and shareholders to oblivion.

What a cruel thing for a candidate to say? I disagree. Every decade we look back and say: “If only we had done the right thing then, we would be in a different position today.”

But no politician dared to do so. When gasoline was $2 a gallon, the government never would have imposed a $2 tax. Now that it is $4 a gallon, the government should at least keep it there, since it is really having the right effect.

I was visiting my local Toyota dealer in Bethesda, Md., last week to trade in one hybrid car for another. There is now a two-month wait to buy a Prius, which gets close to 50 miles per gallon. The dealer told me I was lucky. My hybrid was going up in value every day, so I didn’t have to worry about waiting a while for my new car. But if it were not a hybrid, he said, he would deduct each day $200 from the trade-in price for every $1-a-barrel increase in the OPEC price of crude oil. When I saw the rows and rows of unsold S.U.V.’s parked in his lot, I understood why.

We need to make a structural shift in our energy economy. Ultimately, we need to move our entire fleet to plug-in electric cars. The only way to get from here to there is to start now with a price signal that will force the change.

Barack Obama had the courage to tell voters that the McCain-Clinton summer gas-giveaway plan was a fraud. Wouldn’t it be amazing if he took the next step and put the right plan before the American people? Wouldn’t that just be amazing?

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

OBAMA OBAMA OBAMA!!!


I love the author's sarcasm in this. His words are so caustic and harsh but undeniably true. We can't wait until it's too late.

Anonymous said...

I think we are already on the right road. It just takes awhile for the new technology to trickle down to the middle class consumers. My household first DVD player was $400. The only reason we got it was because we won a raffle. You go to the store today, they cost around $40. Only %10 of what it once was.

NASA had the computers when we went to the moon in the late 60's. It 1993 when my house got the windows 3.2 system.

And so Thatcherism resurfaces. There needs to be pain to move forward. It will hurt to have $4.00 per gallon of gas. But that will anger the consumers to the extent that they will complain to the car manufacturers to produce better fuel efficient cars.

I am happy with our technology. There are electric cars on the road. There are solar powered houses. The problem is that they cost a lot of money.... a LOT of money. The average consumer just cannot afford it. The reason why Hollywood is so green is because they CAN afford the million dollar car that runs purely on electricity or the billion dollar house in New Mexico that is solar powered.

But the kicker of the electric powered car is where the plug plugs into. Your house electric socket. Where does that get power from? A coal power plant in cahoots with a nuclear power plant. Some of the power still is not renewable.

So while we wait for electric powered cars to trickle down to the middle class, we need to make nuclear energy the dominant power source so that when we can plug in our cars, we are actually using renewable energy.

Anonymous said...

Unfortunately this guy has the right idea. The price of oil is NOT going to go down, and the fact that gas is so expensive does make most people drive more sensibly. Making the the gas price have a "floor" at four dollars a gallon is probably the right thing to do. But that cant be all, the government must put some law into effect that requires all new cars to have a minimum of a certian mpg (25 minimum) auto makers cannot be counted upon to make these changes on their own. As long as their is a rich CEO willing to pay for a Hummer with 8 mpg (thats an estimate i dont care how many mpg a hummer gets) auto makers are going to make them.