Fuel prices were in the news this morning. $135 a barrel for oil. A year ago it was something like $66 a barrel. The reasons for the dramatic change in the price of oil was the devaluation of the U.S. dollar and increased demand for oil from China and the developing countries.
Without question the U.S. dollar has devalued. I am not so sure about the increased demand from China, China is a major oil producing country itself.
It seems to me that oil is the new currency standard, replacing gold and silver. If this is true then the real value of our assets, when measured against the oil standard, has declined dramatically in the last year. And as oil has increased in value, interest rates have dropped. Interest is almost free now, with the Bank of Canada overnight rate at 3% and one month T-Bills at 1%. See:
http://www.bankofcanada.ca/en/rates/exchange.html
There is a very intersting paper on how the World Economy is affected by Oil Prices. It was written before the recent dramatic rise in oil. See:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/Papers/2004/High_Oil_Prices.pdf
Without question the U.S. dollar has devalued. I am not so sure about the increased demand from China, China is a major oil producing country itself.
It seems to me that oil is the new currency standard, replacing gold and silver. If this is true then the real value of our assets, when measured against the oil standard, has declined dramatically in the last year. And as oil has increased in value, interest rates have dropped. Interest is almost free now, with the Bank of Canada overnight rate at 3% and one month T-Bills at 1%. See:
http://www.bankofcanada.ca/en/rates/exchange.html
There is a very intersting paper on how the World Economy is affected by Oil Prices. It was written before the recent dramatic rise in oil. See:
http://www.iea.org/Textbase/Papers/2004/High_Oil_Prices.pdf
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