Who is really behind the rising prices at the pumps?
by Jim Hightower
Like a Fourth of July crescendo of fireworks, our gasoline prices are rising higher and higher. While this is tough
on consumers, we're assured by a covey of tongue-clucking industry analysts that nothing can be done about it, for
it's simply the law of supply and demand in action -- so suck it up, and pay up.
But hold your BPExxonMobilShellChevron horses right there. Supply and demand? The supply of crude oil has risen this
year to its highest level in nearly two decades, even while the demand for gasoline has dropped dramatically, having
fallen this month to a 10-year low. Let's see -- supply up, demand down. That's a classic market formula for cheaper
prices at the pump. Yet our prices have steadily moved up, rising by two-thirds since the beginning of the year (and
by 60 cents a gallon in the past two months alone).
What's going on here is not the "magic of the marketplace," but some hocus-pocus by brand-name dealers. What might
surprise you, though, is that the wheeler-dealers now jacking up our pump prices don't operate under the
BPExxonMobilShellChevron brands -- but the logos of Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and other Wall Street traders that
have been placing vast, unregulated, secretive bets on the future price of oil. They're playing an electronic casino
game in a global "dark market" of exotic derivatives and credit swaps.
If this sounds vaguely familiar to you, it's because this is the same game that Wall Street played with subprime
mortgages, leading to the present crash of our economy. And, yes, these are the exact same banksters that you and I
are presently bailing out with our trillions of tax dollars.
Yet, there they go again. By pooling money from sheltered hedge funds, sovereign state funds, offshore accounts and
other super-wealthy investors, speculators like Goldman and Morgan have quietly been buying trillions of dollars
worth of oil derivatives -- which essentially are bets that oil prices will rise to a certain level by a certain
date. Unlike those investors who actually purchase contracts for future delivery of oil, there is no limit on how
much money these gamblers can put into the oil market. Nor do they have to report to anyone how much they have bet,
even though their massive infusion of money is totally and artificially distorting the real value of petroleum.
As CNBC television's top energy correspondent, Sharon Epperson, reported earlier, "It's this money flow -- rather
than the fundamental supply-demand data -- that's driving oil prices higher."
Why is this allowed? Because the Commodity Futures' Modernization Act of 2000 included a provision that was quietly
tucked into the law by then-Sen. Phil Gramm, R-Texas, specifically prohibiting any regulation of such commodity-based
derivatives. Among the enthusiastic backers of this legalized thievery were Robert Rubin, the Wall Streeter who was
Bill Clinton's treasury secretary, and his protege, Larry Summers, who is now Barack Obama's chief economic
advisor.
This bipartisan cabal created a speculative mechanism that's presently sucking money out of your pocket with every
gallon of gas you pump. Meanwhile, every dollar that Goldman, Morgan and the rest use to inflate oil prices is a
dollar they are not investing in real economic activity that could create middle-class jobs.
As Woody Guthrie wrote in a song about outlaws: "Some'll rob you with a six-gun/Some with a fountain pen."
It's time to regulate Wall Street's gas-pump thievery -- and to put a few of the perpetrators in jail.
