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Bush Speaks Nonsense on Energy
by
Sheldon Richman,
February 10, 2006
Despite the bravado in his State of the Union address, President Bush actually admitted that his efforts in the Middle East are destined to fail. Heres what he
said: America is addicted to oil, which is often imported from unstable parts of the world. He then unveiled billions of dollars in new subsidies to find an alternative to oil.
Whats going on here? Havent we been told repeatedly that Bushs policy in the Middle East is going to bring freedom, democracy, and stability to the long-suffering oil states of the region? Why the subtle confession that the policy will fail?
Could the victory of Hamas in the Palestinian elections
have convinced Bush that his democratic crusade may not
achieve his stated goals? Whatever the reason, his
remarks about oil betrayed a glimmer of realism. In this
administration, that is big news.
The rest of what he had to say about oil, though, is shot
through with nonsense. No ones addicted to oil.
Addiction implies passivity and helplessness; it
doesnt even apply to drugs. It certainly has
nothing to do with oil. We use oil because under current
circumstances, it makes sense to use oil. Its
efficient and still cheaper than the alternatives. Maybe,
as the Wall Street Journal suggests, Bushs remarks
about oil are poll-driven, but it is rather premature to
declare the dawn of the post-oil era. Much of the earth
has not been explored, much less tapped. And there are
huge quantities of shale oil and tar sands in Canada and
the United States, quantities that rival Saudi
Arabias crude-oil reserves. Theres lots of
oil outside the Middle East. So whats the president
talking about? (Incidentally, only 11 percent of oil used
by Americans comes from the Persian Gulf.)
Not that all is well with energy. More than most
industries, energy has been shaped substantially by
government intervention. It is a politicized industry.
Companies have grown large thanks to an array of
pro-corporate policies. For half a century the U.S.
government has meddled in the Middle East largely to keep
the oil companies investments secure. This has
worked to the detriment of would-be competitors that
might have come up with alternatives in a laissez-faire
environment. The fact is, we have no idea what the energy
industry would have looked like had the government kept
hands off and let free competition determine the outcome.
Clearly, Bush is nowhere near learning this lesson. His
speech included promises to use taxpayer money to find
the next source of energy. He seems to think it will come
from switch grass and wood chips. But how the heck can he
know? Theres no trick in giving a few big
well-connected corporations billions of dollars and having
them come up with a new form of energy. The trick is
finding energy forms that make economic sense, with
benefits outweighing costs. Subsidies distort
peoples perception, guaranteeing that what they do
will not make economic sense. Did we learn
nothing from the synthetic-fuels boondoggles of the Jimmy
Carter years?
Advocates of big government (Bush included) always think
that subsidies are an efficient way to achieve an
economic objective. The truth is the opposite. The only
way to know whether a solution is economically sensible
is to have all the costs borne openly by producers and
consumers; as the economists say, all externalities
should be internalized. Forcing the taxpayers to bear the
costs will create an illusion that will mislead everyone,
wasting resources and leaving us worse off.
To have a rational energy industry there is only one
choice: a free, unsubsidized market. In other words, the
best energy policy is no energy policy.
Sheldon Richman is senior fellow at The Future of Freedom Foundation, author of Tethered Citizens: Time to Repeal the Welfare State, and editor of The Freeman magazine. Visit his blog Free Association at www.sheldonrichman.com. Send him email.
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