iTulip has spoke at length on the Output Gap Trap as well as Peak Cheap Oil.
There are also all sorts of numbers relating oil prices and GDP.
What I'm wondering is: has iTulip done any work to try and determine the effect of Peak Cheap Oil on 'economic velocity'?
Economic velocity - I am defining as the P/C economy's equivalent of monetary velocity: not the suppy of P/C output per se but the speed at which it circulates.
I may be terming this wrong, but it seems that the cost of oil relates directly to the cost of transportation, which in turn would affect 'economic velocity'.
If this long train of thought holds, then the question is: Peak Cheap Oil isn't just about oil prices and their direct impact on GDP, but Peak Cheap Oil and its severe oscillations of oil prices would seem to impact transportation costs hence 'economic velocity'.
Perhaps above and beyond the outright GDP impact?
There are also all sorts of numbers relating oil prices and GDP.
What I'm wondering is: has iTulip done any work to try and determine the effect of Peak Cheap Oil on 'economic velocity'?
Economic velocity - I am defining as the P/C economy's equivalent of monetary velocity: not the suppy of P/C output per se but the speed at which it circulates.
I may be terming this wrong, but it seems that the cost of oil relates directly to the cost of transportation, which in turn would affect 'economic velocity'.
If this long train of thought holds, then the question is: Peak Cheap Oil isn't just about oil prices and their direct impact on GDP, but Peak Cheap Oil and its severe oscillations of oil prices would seem to impact transportation costs hence 'economic velocity'.
Perhaps above and beyond the outright GDP impact?
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