The Wall Street Journal recently ran an article called, Glut of Capital and Labor Challenge Policy Makers:
Global oversupply extends beyond commodities, elevating deflation risk.
To me, this is a very serious issue, quite likely signaling that we are
reaching what has been called Limits to Growth, a situation modeled in 1972 in a book by that name.
What
happens is that economic growth eventually runs into limits. Many
people have assumed that these limits would be marked by high prices and
excessive demand for goods. In my view, the issue is precisely the
opposite one: Limits to growth are instead marked by low prices and inadequate demand. Common
workers can no longer afford to buy the goods and services that the
economy produces, because of inadequate wage growth. The price of all
commodities drops, because of lower demand by workers. Furthermore,
investors can no longer find investments that provide an adequate return
on capital, because prices for finished goods are pulled down by the
low demand of workers with inadequate wages.
Evidence Regarding the Connection Between Energy Consumption and GDP Growth
We can see the close connection between world energy consumption and world GDP using historical data.

Figure
1. World GDP in 2010$ compared (from USDA) compared to World
Consumption of Energy (from BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2014).
This
chart gives a clue regarding what is wrong with the economy. The slope
of the line implies that adding one percentage point of growth in energy
usage tends to add less and less GDP growth over time, as I have shown
in Figure 2. This means that if we want to have, for example, a constant
4% growth in world GDP for the period 1969 to 2013, we would need to gradually increase the rate of growth in energy consumption
from about 1.8% = (4.0% – 2.2%) growth in energy consumption in 1969 to
2.8% = (4.0% – 1.2%) growth in energy consumption in 2013. This need
for more and more growth in energy use to produce the same amount of
economic growth is taking place despite all of our efforts toward
efficiency, and despite all of our efforts toward becoming more of a
“service” economy, using less energy products!

Figure 2. Expected change in GDP growth corresponding to 1% growth in total energy, based on Figure 1 fitted line.
To
make matters worse, growth in world energy supply is generally trending
downward as well. (This is not just oil supply whose growth is trending
downward; this is oil plus everything else, including “renewables”.)

Figure
3. Three-year average percent change in world energy consumption, based
on BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2014 data.
There
would be no problem, if economic growth were something that we could
simply walk away from with no harmful consequences. Unfortunately, we
live in a world where there are only two options–win or lose. We can win
in our contest against other species (especially microbes), or we can
lose. Winning looks like economic growth; losing looks like financial
collapse with huge loss of human population, perhaps to epidemics,
because we cannot maintain our current economic system.
The
symptoms of losing the game are the symptoms we are seeing today–low
commodity prices (temporarily higher, but nowhere nearly high enough to
maintain production), not enough good paying jobs for common workers,
and lack of investment opportunities, because workers cannot afford the
high prices of goods that would be required to provide adequate return
on investment.
How We Have Won in Our Contest with Other Species–Early Efforts
The
“secret formula” humans have had for winning in our competition against
other species has been the use of supplemental energy, adding to the
energy we get from food. There is a physics reason why this approach
works: total population by all species is limited by available energy supply.
Providing our own external energy supply was (and still is) a great
work-around for this limitation. Even in the days of hunter-gatherers,
humans used three times as much energy as could be obtained through food
alone (Figure 1).
Earliest supplementation of food energy came by burning sticks and other biomass, starting one million years ago. Using this approach, humans were able to gain an advantage over other species in several ways:
- We were able to cook some of our food. This made a wider range of plants and animals suitable for food and made the nutrients from these foods more easily available to our bodies.
- Because less energy was needed for chewing and digesting, our bodies could put energy into growing a larger brain, thus giving us an advantage over other animals.
- The use of cooked food freed up time for such activities as hunting and making clothes, because less time was needed for chewing.
- Heat from burning plant material could be used to keep warm in cold areas, thereby extending our range and increasing total human population that could be supported.
- Fire could be used to chase off predatory animals and hunt prey animals.
Our
bodies are now adapted to the need for supplemental energy. Our teeth
our smaller, and our jaws and digestive apparatus have shrunk in size,
as our brain has grown. The large population of humans that are alive
today could not survive without supplemental energy for many purposes,
such as cooking food, heating homes, and fighting illnesses that spread
when humans are in as close proximity as they are today.
Our Modern Formula For Winning the Battle Against Other Species
In my view, the formula that has allowed humans to keep winning the battle against other species is the following:
- Use increasing amounts of inexpensive supplemental energy to leverage human energy so that finished goods and services produced per worker rises each year.
- Pay for this system with debt, because (if supplemental energy costs are cheap enough), it is possible to repay the debt, plus the interest on the debt, with the additional goods and services made possible by the cheap additional energy.
- This system gradually becomes more complex to deal with problems that come with rising population and growing use of resources. However, if the output of goods per worker is growing rapidly enough, it should be possible to pay for the costs associated with this increased complexity, in addition to interest costs.
- The whole system “works” as long as the total quantity of finished goods and services rises rapidly enough that it can fund all of the following: (a) a rising standard of living for common workers so that they can afford increasing amounts of debt to buy more goods, (b) debt repayment, and interest on the debt of the system, and (c) and an increasing amount of “overhead” in the form of government services, medical care, educational services, and salaries of high paid officials (in business as well as government). This overhead is needed to deal with the increasing complexity that comes with growth.
The formula
for a growing economy is now failing. The rate of economic growth is
falling, partly because energy supply is slowing (Figure 3), and partly
because we need more and more growth of energy supply to produce a given
amount of economic growth (Figure 2). With this lowered world economic
growth, the amount of goods and services being produced is not rising
fast enough to support all of the functions that it needs to cover:
interest payments, growing wages of common workers, and growing
“overhead” of a more complex society.
Some Reasons the Economic Growth Cycle is Now Failing
Let’s
look at a few areas where we are reaching obstacles to this continued
growth in final goods and services. An overarching problem is
diminishing returns, which is reflected in increasingly higher prices of
production.
1. Energy supplies are becoming more expensive to extract.
We
extract the easiest to extract energy supplies first, and as these
deplete, need to use the more expensive to extract energy supplies. We
hear much about “growing efficiency” but, in fact, we are becoming less
efficient in the production of energy supplies.
In the US, EIA
data shows that we are becoming less efficient at coal production, in
terms of coal production per worker hour (Figure 5).
With oil, growing inefficiency is shown by the steeply rising cost of oil exploration and production since 1999 (Figure 6).

Figure 6. Figure by Steve Kopits of Douglas-Westwood showing trends in world oil exploration and production costs per barrel.
Thus,
it is for a fairly recent period, namely the period since about 2000,
that we have been encountering rising costs both for US coal and for
worldwide oil extraction.
The extra workers and extra costs
required for producing the same amount of energy counteract the
tendency toward growth in the rest of the economy. This occurs because
the rest of the economy must produce finished products with fewer
workers and less resources as a result of the extra demands on these
resources by the energy sector.
2. Other materials, besides energy products, are experiencing diminishing returns.
Other
resources, such as metals and other minerals and fresh water, are also
becoming increasingly expensive to extract. The issue with mineral ores
is similar to that with fossil fuels. We start with a fixed amount of
ores in good locations and with high mineral percentages. As we move to
less desirable ores, both human labor and more energy products are
required, making the extraction process less efficient.
With fresh
water, the issue is likely to be a need for desalination or long
distance transport, to satisfy the needs of a growing population.
Workarounds again involve more human labor and more resource use, making
the production of fresh water less efficient.
In both of these
cases, growing inefficiency leaves the rest of the economy with less
human energy and less energy products to produce the finished goods and
services that the economy needs.
3. Growing pollution is taking its toll.
Instead
of just producing end products, we are increasingly finding ourselves
fighting pollution. While this is a benefit to society, it really is
only offsetting what would otherwise be a negative. Thus, it acts like
overhead, rather than producing economic growth.
From the point of
view of workers having to pay for higher cost energy in order to fight
pollution (say, substitution of a higher cost energy source, or paying
for more pollution controls), the additional cost acts like a tax.
Workers need to cut back on other expenditures to afford the pollution
control workarounds. The effect is thus recessionary.
4. The amount of “overhead” to the world economy has been growing rapidly in recent years, for a number of reasons:
- The amount of overhead is growing because we are reaching natural barriers. For example, population per acre of arable land is growing, so we need more intensity of development to produce food for a rising population.
- With greater population density and increased bacterial antibiotic resistance, disease transmission becomes a more of a problem.
- Increasing education is being encouraged, whether or not there are jobs available that will make use of that education. Education that cannot be used in a productive way to produce more goods and services can be considered overhead for the economy. Educational expenses are frequently financed by debt. Repayment of this debt leads to a decrease in demand for other goods, such as new homes and vehicles.
- We have more elderly to whom we have promised benefits, because with the benefit of better nutrition and medical care, more people are living longer.
5. We are reaching debt limits.
As
economic growth has slowed, we have been adding more and more debt, to
try to mitigate the problem. This additional debt becomes a problem in
many ways: (a) without cheap energy to leverage human labor, there are
not many productive investments that can be made; (b) the addition of
more debt leads to a need for more interest payments; and (c) at some
point debt ratios become overwhelmingly high.
At least part of the
slowdown in economic growth that we are seeing today is coming from a
slowdown in the growth of debt. Without debt growth, it is hard to keep
commodity prices high enough. Investment in new manufacturing plants is
also affected by low growth in debt.
Reasons for Confusion in Understanding Our Current Predicament
1. Not understanding that all of the symptoms we are seeing today are manifestations of the same underlying “illness”.
Most
analysts think that the economy has stubbed its toe and has a headache,
rather than recognizing that it has a serious underlying illness.
2. Academia is focused way too narrowly, and tied too closely to what has been written before.
Academics,
because of their need to write papers, focus on what previous papers
have said. Unfortunately, previous papers have not understood the nature
of our problem. Academics have developed models based on our situation
when we were away from limits. The issues we are facing cover such
diverse subjects as physics, geology, and finance. It is hard for
academics to become knowledgeable in many areas at once.
3. Models that seemed to work before are no longer appropriate.
We take models like the familiar supply and demand model of economists and assume that they represent everlasting truths.

Figure
7. (Source Wikipedia). The price P of a product is determined by a
balance between production at each price (supply S) and the desires of
those with purchasing power at each price (demand D). The diagram shows a
positive shift in demand from D1 to D2, resulting in an increase in
price (P) and quantity sold (Q) of the product.
Unfortunately,
as we get close to limits, things change. Both wage levels and debt
levels have an impact on demand; the quantity goods available is also
affected by diminishing returns. The model that worked in the past may
be totally inappropriate now.
Even a complex model like the
climate change model being used by the IPCC is likely to be affected by
financial limits. If near-term financial limits are to be expected,
IPCC’s estimate of future carbon from fuels is likely to be too high. At
a minimum, the findings of the IPCC need to be framed differently:
climate change may be one of a number of problems facing those people
who manage to survive a financial crash.
4. Too much wishful thinking.
Everyone
would like to present a positive result, especially when grants are
being given for academic research will support some favorable finding. A
favorite form of wishful thinking is believing that higher costs of
energy products will not be a problem. Higher cost energy products,
whether they are renewable or not, are a problem for many reasons:
- They represent growing inefficiency in the economy. With growing inefficiency, we produce fewer finished goods and services per worker, not more.
- Countries using more of the higher cost types of energy become less competitive in the world market, and because of this, may develop financial problems. The countries most affected by the Great Recession were countries using a high percentage of oil in their energy mix.
- The amount workers have available to spend is limited. If a worker has $100 to spend on energy supply, he can buy 100 times as much in energy supplies priced at $1 as he can energy supplies priced at $100. This same principle works even if the cost difference is much lower–say $3.50 gallon vs. $3.00 gallon.
5. Too much faith in, “We pay each other’s wages.”
There
is a common belief that growing inefficiency is OK; the wages we pay
for unneeded education will work its way through the system as more
wages for other workers. Unfortunately, the real secret to
economic growth is not paying each other’s wages; it is growing output
of finished products per worker through increased use of cheap energy
(and perhaps technology, to make this cheap energy useful). Increased overhead for the system is not helpful.
6. An “upside down” peak oil story.
Most
people in the peak oil community believe what economists say about
supply and demand–namely, that oil prices will rise if there is a supply
problem. They have not realized that in a networked economy, wages and
prices are tightly linked. The way limits apply is not necessarily the
way we expect. Limits may come through a lack of good paying jobs, and
because of this lack of jobs, inability to purchase products containing
oil.
The connection between energy and jobs is clear. Good jobs
require the use of energy, such as electricity and oil; lack of
good-paying jobs is likely to be a manifestation of an inadequate supply
of cheap energy. Also, high paying jobs are what allow rising buying
power, and thus keep demand high. Thus, oil limits may appear as a
demand problem, with low oil prices, rather than as a high oil price
problem. In my opinion, what we are seeing now is a manifestation
of peak oil. It is just happening in an upside down way relative to what
most were expecting.
Conclusion
One way of viewing our problem today is as a crisis of affordability.
Young people cannot afford to start families or buy new homes because
of a combination of the high cost of higher education (leading to debt),
the high cost of fuel-efficient new cars (again leading to debt), the
high cost of resale homes, and the relatively low wages paid to young
workers. Even older workers often have an affordability problem. Many
have found their wages stagnating or falling at the same time that the
cost of healthcare, cars, electricity, and (until recently) oil rises. A
recent Gallop Survey showed an increasing share of workers categorize themselves as “working class” rather than “middle class.”
It
is this affordability crisis that is bringing the system down. Without
adequate wages, the amount of debt that can be added to the system lags
as well. It becomes impossible to keep prices of commodities up at a
high enough level to encourage production of these commodities. Return
on investment tends to be low for the same reason. Most researchers have
not recognized these problems, because they are narrowly focused and
assume that models that worked in the past will continue to work today.
http://theenergycollective.com/gail-tverberg/2225046/why-we-have-oversupply-almost-everything-oil-labor-capital-etc


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