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Accusing oil companies of price gouging is like accusing sharks of
swimming. That’s what oil companies do. In fact, that’s the imperative
of the marketplace: to charge whatever you can get.
I remember taking Economics 10 at college, and my instructor told us that on
a hot day the ice cream parlor should raise prices. Well, it’s a hot day
right now, and the oil companies are jacking up the price at the pumps.
If you worship the market, fill your tank and smile.
But the free market is not exactly in a textbook place right now when it comes
to oil. Rather than having a multitude of ice cream parlors to choose from,
the consumer can select from only a few oil companies, and they own not only
the parlor but the cows and the dairies, too.
Plus, there’s another big difference between ice cream and oil. The choice
of having an ice cream cone is a luxury. Driving a car, for many of us, is a
necessity.
That’s something the hardcore free market apologists don’t grasp.
“Gas station owners cannot force us to buy gasoline,” writes Alex
Epstein of the Ayn Rand Institute, in an article entitled ‘The Myth of
Price-Gouging.’ “They can only offer us a trade, which we are free
to accept or reject.”
But how free is the independent trucker, or the taxicab driver, or the traveling
salesperson? How free is the service worker who can’t live in the expensive
city where she is employed because the cost of housing is so high but has to
live thirty miles away, where there is no public transportation?
Oil companies know that they have a lock on a crucial product. They’re
charging through the teeth for it.
Still, fantasies of a free market die hard.
“There is no such thing as ‘price gouging’ by private business,”
says Epstein. Which is, I suppose, just the flip side of saying all profit is
theft.
It very well may be that what the oil companies have been doing over the last
couple of years does not technically qualify as collusion.
“The real problem is legal manipulation of prices,” says Tyson
Slocum, acting director of Public Citizens’ Critical Mass Energy and Environment
Program. “The oil companies have gotten so big they don’t need to
collude anymore. Advances in computer modeling have really aided the ability
of the big companies to game the market.”
So game it they do.
And because the five largest oil refining companies in America—ExxonMobil,
Valero, ConocoPhillips, Shell, and BP—control more than 50 percent of
the market, they can individually decide to limit the supply of refined oil
products. If ExxonMobil sees Shell taking gasoline off the market, it can do
likewise, and they will all end up making more profits without ever needing
to huddle together in a boardroom to fix prices.
Even George Bush, as ardent a defender of the oil companies as ever set foot
in the Oval Office, has begun to yelp about price gouging. With his popularity
down at the freezing mark, he’ll say just about anything. But he won’t
say “windfall profits tax,” even though 80 percent of Americans
are in favor of it, including 76 percent of Republicans, according to one recent
poll.
Bush ruled that out in his April 25 speech. “What can the government
do?” he asked. “One of the past responses by government, particularly
from the party of which I am not a member, has been to have—to propose—price
fixing, or increase the taxes. Those plans haven’t worked.”
No, we can’t have that, can we? Never mind that the windfall amounted
to $36 billion last year in profits to the oil companies. ExxonMobil alone made
$10 billion in the final quarter of 2005. In the first quarter of 2006, it made
$8.4 billion, up from the same period a year ago.
Democratic Senators Byron Dorgan and Christopher Dodd have introduced legislation
to impose a 50 percent excise tax on oil profits when it is selling for more
than $50 a barrel. Representative Dennis Kucinich has proposed a 100 percent
tax on windfall oil profits. But not only are Republican Congressional leaders
opposed to these ideas, they don’t even want to strip out some of the
tax benefits the oil companies have been reaping already.
“While Republican leaders sharply criticize soaring gasoline prices and
energy industry profits, GOP negotiators have decided to knock out provisions
in a major tax bill that would force the oil companies to pay billions of dollars
more in taxes,” The Washington Post reported on April 26. No surprise
there. Since 2001, the oil industry has gurgled up $55 million in campaign contributions,
with 81 percent going to Republicans, according to Public Citizen.
Bush talked the talk. “These energy companies don’t need unnecessary
tax breaks,” he said. But he didn’t walk the walk. All he proposed
was phasing out $2 billion in tax breaks over the next ten years. This, after
giving the oil companies billions of dollars in tax breaks in last year’s
energy bill, along with a holiday on royalty payments on oil and gas they extract
from public lands.
Bush proposed several other measures that won’t solve the problem of
high gas prices.
First, he offered to give bigger incentives to consumers who purchase hybrid
or clean-diesel vehicles, and there’s nothing wrong with that.
But it won’t do anything in the short term. “There is already a
long waiting list to buy certain hybrid cars,” Slocum notes. And it’s
not aimed at the people who are being most disadvantaged by high oil prices.
Bill Wineke, a columnist for the Wisconsin State Journal, put it well. “Tax
credits will help people like me, but they won’t help people like my son,
Andy,” he writes. They both drive a fair distance to work. But “the
difference between us, frankly, is that I have more money. . . . I can buy a
new car. Andy can’t. . . . If he could afford a new car, he could afford
the gasoline for his current car.”
Second, Bush said the U.S. government would stop purchasing oil for the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve so as to increase supplies of oil on the market. But the problem
right now is not one of supply. The Department of Energy in April revealed that
oil inventories in the United States were at an eight-year high. And anyway,
Bush’s move would account for less than half of 1 percent of U.S. oil
consumption. His new-found religion on this issue is interesting, to be sure.
“We will not play politics with the Strategic Petroleum Reserve,”
Bush said on the 2004 campaign trail. Well, what’s he doing now?
Bush also seized on high gas prices to advance his anti-environmental agenda.
He proposed waiving clean air rules for gasoline blends, and he insisted that
oil refinery construction permits be decided on within one year’s time.
This will greatly diminish the ability of consumers, environmentalists, cities,
and states to properly investigate the risks that such construction could bring.
To top that off, Bush once again put drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife
Refuge on the table, even though oil supplies are plentiful right now.
“We can gut our environment to match that of Bangladesh, and all it’ll
accomplish is to make our air quality poorer and our people sicker,” says
Slocum.
Bush and conservatives love to harp on the fact that refinery capacity is way
down in this country, and they blame that on environmentalists.
But as Slocum notes, a small oil company, Arizona Clean Fuels, has managed
to navigate the bureaucracy and get all the permits it needs.
If it can do this, asks Slocum, “why can’t the world’s most
powerful corporation?” He offers an answer: “ExxonMobil has no interest
in creating additional refineries because it will drive prices down.”
Finally, Bush ordered the Federal Trade Commission, the Department of Justice,
and the Energy Department to investigate whether the price of gas has been “unfairly
manipulated.” The tip-off here is the word unfairly. Because, like the
Ayn Rand Institute, the Bush Administration doesn’t believe there is such
a thing, short of outright collusion. We should all live to see the day when
the Bush-Cheney Administration hauls ExxonMobil and the other big oil companies
into court. But Bush will never do it. Besides which, going after the oil companies
would be hazardous to Cheney’s health: He’d have his final, fatal
heart attack if Bush brought indictments against them.
What Bush didn’t propose is as telling as what he did. He failed to require
the automakers to increase the fuel efficiency of their vehicles. The average
car and truck on the road today gets only twenty-one miles to the gallon. In
1987, the average was twenty-two.
We’ve been going backwards. And in last year’s energy bill, Bush,
the Republicans, and many Democrats, too, blocked an amendment to boost fuel
efficiency standards.
“President Bush continues to ignore the most obvious and practical solutions,”
the Sierra Club says. “The biggest single step we can take toward saving
money at the gas pump, curbing global warming, and cutting America’s oil
dependence is to make our cars, trucks, and SUVs go farther on a gallon of gas.”
We already have the technology, says the Sierra Club, “to make all new
cars, SUVs, and other light trucks average forty miles per gallon within the
next ten years.” According to the Sierra Club, this would “save
more oil than the United States currently imports from the entire Persian Gulf
and could ever get out of the Arctic Refuge, combined.”
Or, as Daniel A. Lashof, science director of the Natural Resources Defense
Council, puts it, “We cannot drill our way out of this crisis.”
The only solution, he says, “is to use less oil. Period.”
But that goes against the entire ethos of the Bush-Cheney policy, which is:
Consume until we drop. Bush after 9/11 told us to go shopping. And Cheney derided
conservation as a mere lifestyle choice. His energy report in the spring of
2001, where he was counseled by other energy executives, took as a given that
the United States would be as dependent on foreign oil in twenty years as it
was then. The Cheney solution was to make sure the United States had better
relations with foreign oil producing nations, and to have the oil companies
essentially act as U.S. ambassadors.
Since then, Cheney and Bush have wheeled out another tactic: war. They invaded
Iraq, with the second biggest oil supplies, and now they’re threatening
Iran, another top ten oil supplier.
In fact, the instability of Iraq and the belligerent threats toward Iran have
done a lot in themselves to push oil prices up.
“The Iranian situation obviously causes markets to—creates angst
in the marketplace, and the result of which is higher prices,” said Al
Hubbard, Bush’s director of the National Economic Council, on April 25.
What we’re seeing at the pumps is part of the bill for Bush’s
reckless militarism.
Ultimately, to solve the problem of oil we need to solve the problem
of empire.
We cannot keep consuming 25 percent of world’s oil when we have
2 percent of the world’s oil supply and 5 percent of its population.
We cannot keep invading and bombing countries that have the oil we’re
addicted to. (Bush, in his April 25 speech, acknowledged that “some of
the nations we rely on for oil have unstable governments, or agendas that are
hostile to the United States.”)
We cannot keep imposing an economic policy on the rest of the world
that is designed for the oil industry and other private companies.
They are the ones that benefit the most from the empire.
They are the ones that now, more than ever, run the empire.
We need to get over the illusion of the self-regulating market and
the sovereign consumer.
We need to bring the giant corporations to heel.
Otherwise, they’ll keep gouging us. And not just at the pumps.