Jim Hightower Explains How McBush Economic Adviser Screwed People in the US

Yesterday, in two straightforward sentences Jim Hightower explained how former Republican Senator Phil Gramm of Texas, Sid McBush's chief economic adviser, helped drive up the price of oil and screwed people in the US.

Here's the background provided by Hightower:  "The biggest cause is not OPEC, or increased demand from China. Instead, it’s that same fun bunch that brought us the collapse in today’s housing market: rich speculators, working through global investment banks and hedge funds.

"Most Americans who find themselves being robbed at the pump have no idea that faraway commodity traders are manipulating the price of crude using a mischievous mechanism known as the “Enron Loophole.”  This creates an electronic casino game, allowing global speculators to bet on the future price of oil, using a few facts, wild guesses, and chicken entrails as the basis for their bets, which artificially drive up the price of oil. Hedge funds at Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, for example, own huge amounts of these oil futures, and they’re already accepting bets as high as $200 a barrel – a price completely unattached to the real cost of producing oil or to such niceties as supply and demand."

Here are his explanatory sentences: "Worse, their gambling on our prices is done with no public oversight. That’s because a special loophole says that electronic trading of such commodities as oil is not subject to the normal government rules that prevent price distortions."

Here are the Hightower identified perpetrators: "This loophole was written by Enron lobbyists, rammed through Congress in 2000 by then-Senator Phil Gramm, and signed by Bill Clinton. The resulting speculative oil bubble has jacked up our pump prices by a third, costing you and me about $1,500 each over the past two years – with much more to come out of our pockets as speculators raise their bets."

Thank you, Jim.  Now who is going to pin Gramm, McBush and the rest of those SOB's to the wall besides you?

 

What did you think of this article?




Trackbacks
  • No trackbacks exist for this post.
Comments
  • No comments exist for this post.
Leave a comment

Submitted comments are subject to moderation before being displayed.

 Name

 Email (will not be published)

 Website

Your comment is 0 characters limited to 3000 characters.