It is the US dollar and US policy, not the oil prices
American media continue to focus on the rising price of oil, and how they drive inflation and increase energy costs.
While this is true, it is only true in an indirect sense. It’s not the oil that is extremely expensive – it was much more expensive in 1980, if measured in other currencies – it is the dollar that is weak.
Here’s that chart for the USD versus the Euro for the last 12 months:
Here is the Brent spot price for the same period:
Adjust oil prices for the dollar slip, and there is still a price increase, but it is actually not all that huge.
The dollar is weak because the US interest rate is low – actually negative when adjusted for inflation – and because the US banking system and credit markets are shaky. And the stock marked is in for a rough ride, whether Americans want to believe it or not. So investors, both inside and outside the US, go into oil and commodities.
This, of course, means the causes for the high oil price to a large extent is found in policy failures within the US. There really isn’t all that much cause to blame the Arabs or the rest of the world, certainly not for the current recession in the US, and only to a limited extent for the current oil prices.


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