Guest Perspective by Ralph Nader
Gasoline and heating oil prices are ratcheting up. In
California, some motorists are paying over $5 per gallon. President Obama
declared that "there is no quick fix" for this problem. Meanwhile,
the hapless but howling Republicans are blaming him for the fuel surge as if he
is a price control czar.
Indeed, President Obama has some proper power to cool off
retail petroleum prices. David Stockman, President Ronald Reagan's Budget
Director, said it plainly on CNN last week, "Stop beating the war drums
right now [against Iran], and Obama could do that, and he could say the neocons
are history." Having done his stint on Wall Street, Stockman knows that
war talk by the war hawks inside and outside of our government is just what the
speculators on the New York Mercantile Exchange want to hear as they bid up the
price. Your gasoline prices are not charging up due to strains between supply
and demand. Speculation, with those notorious derivatives and swaps, is what is
poking larger holes in your fuel budget, according to Securities and Exchange
Commission enforcement lawyers. The too-big-to-fail Wall Street gamblers -
Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan Chase, Bank of America, Merrill Lynch, and Morgan
Stanley - are at it again.
Dr. Mark Cooper of the Consumer Federation of America
documented that speculation added $600 to the average family's gasoline
expenditures in 2011. Earlier, the head of Exxon/Mobil estimated that
speculation was responsible for over $40 per barrel in price increase at a time
when oil was more than $100 per barrel.
Last June, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
(CFTC) Chairman, Gary Gensler, declared in New York City that "huge
inflows of speculative money create a self-fulfilling prophecy that drives up
commodity prices."
Mr. Gensler and the CFTC received more legislated
authority to police these Wall Street gamblers, but key members of Congress
refused to give him a budget to, in his words, "be a more effective cop on
the beat," at a time of sharply-increasing trading volume. Congressional
campaign budgets are being swelled by campaign contributions from those very
Wall Street gamblers. This is called "cash-register politics."
Meanwhile, you the people pay and pay at the pump and wonder why no one is
doing anything about it.
But an inadequate budget only explains part of Mr.
Gensler's problems. He is continually undermined by other CFTC Commissioners
who do not want real enforcement action. He also seems to be wearing down under
the pressure.
Back in the 1970s, a sudden increase in gasoline prices -
even a few cents - led to an uproar among consumers and demands for regulation,
price controls and other government action. Now that the New York Mercantile
Exchange, with its big banking and hedge fund speculators loading up on fat
profits and bonuses is right here in the U.S., officials are throwing up their
hands saying "there are no quick fixes."
Yet by the constant Israeli-Obama-Hillary
Clinton-Congressional-AIPAC belligerent talk about Iran developing a capability
to produce nuclear weapons is provoking Tehran's warnings about the Straits of
Hormuz, and the oil price speculators are having a field day with your gas
dollars.
Senator Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) regularly demands that
that Obama's regulators impose limits on oil speculations. He asserts that the
"skyrocketing price of gas and oil has nothing to do with the fundamentals
of supply and demand." Even Goldman Sachs analyst, David Greely, claimed
Wall Street speculation in the futures market is driving up oil prices.
In response to such clamorings, President Obama announced
in April 2011 a new inter-agency working group to combat fraud. Don't hold your
breath waiting for any action here.
So why doesn't President Obama invite the various
industries such as the trucking and airline companies that are hurt by
spiraling oil prices, together with consumer groups, motorist organizations,
such as AAA and Better World Society, and the relevant government agencies to
generate the pressure on Congress and the recalcitrant members of the CFTC to
stop fronting for the Wall Street casino giants?
Mr. Obama and Energy Secretary Chu keep saying that there
is enough oil in world markets and that speculatively-driven higher oil prices
are undermining the U.S. economic recovery. Yet Mr. Obama seems unwilling to
fully use his administration's existing authority to crack down on the surging
speculation.
There is much more action possible under current
statutory authority for the regulators to use and earn their salaries. They
need to hear louder rumblings from the people. While the people need, whenever
possible and safe, to walk short distances instead of drive there, if only to
stiffen their determination to fight back in more than one way.
4 comments:
Oil prices always come back before the presidential election...
Mark de Zabaleta
Business Economic Consulting S.L.
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