October
31 ,
2005
Text, from National
Public Radio's Morning Edition
click here for audio edition
In
Defense of High Prices and Profits
by Russell Roberts
Those Senate hearings on the cause of high gasoline prices should be really
brief. Three words. Supply and demand.
When hurricanes destroy refining capacity, pipelines
and drilling platforms there’s less gasoline to go around
and prices rise.
Everybody knows what’s bad about high prices. Less
money for us. More money for the oil industry.
But high prices are good, too. When prices are high, some people will drive
less, car pool, buy more energy efficient cars allowing the people who really
want gasoline to have it.
There’s another benefit of high prices. They encourage greedy oil companies
to pull oil out of the ground that isn’t worth pulling out of the ground
when prices are low.
Getting oil out of the ground and into your car in the form of gasoline is
an extremely expensive and unpredictable process. ExxonMobil spent almost $15
billion last year on equipment to find new oil and make refineries more productive.
As consumers, we want oil companies to take risks and spend money searching
for new supplies. Profits are the reward for risk-taking and investment. Take
away profits when they're high and oil companies will take fewer risks and
invest less. That means less energy in the future.
But isn’t the recent run up of prices just corporate greed run amok?
I don’t know. At my local station, prices are down 85 cents per gallon
from the peak of a few weeks ago. Did the owner just get nice overnight? Did
he forget how to gouge? Did he figure he’d made plenty of money and it
was time to give me a break? I actually think he’d still charge $3.50
a gallon if he
could. But now that there’s more gasoline on the market, he can’t
charge what he did before and still get my business. Too many competitors are
charging less.
And next summer, if there’s no hurricane, what will happen if oil companies
try and raise prices back to $3.50 per gallon? It won’t work. There’ll
be too much gasoline to go around and prices will fall.
If the Senate does have hearings on oil industry profits. My fantasy is that
an Exxon executive will have the courage to say:
“Yes, we made a lot of money last quarter. We earned it and we’d
like to keep it. And in those times when we make a lot less, or even lose money,
we won’t expect to be bailed out.”
I doubt I’ll hear that. But leaving profits alone and the incentives
they provide, works better than having the government decide how much the oil
industry deserves.