U.S. energy prices have risen to more than 6 percent of consumer spending — which may be a historic "tipping point." Our food prices, meanwhile, have had their steepest increase in a generation, to about 6.5 percent of spending.
That's a double whammy consumers haven't suffered since Jimmy Carter's infamous "stagflation," a painful mix of weak economic growth, high unemployment and rising inflation in the late 1970s.
Both the high oil prices and the high food prices trace directly back to the Obama Administration. Oil has gotten no scarcer during the Obama years, but the dollar has weakened by about 17 percent.
The price of oil is denominated in U.S. dollars, so the dollar decline almost exactly matches the rise in America's oil prices. Meanwhile, the President has engineered a stop-stall on domestic energy production, from Alaska to the Gulf, making even our own oil more costly.
Some months ago, I sat at an energy roundtable with Congressman Markey from Massachusetts (of Waxman-Markey cap-and-trade fame), the president of Duke Power and the former director of President Clinton's Council on Environmental Quality. The sympathy at the table was for rigging higher natural gas prices so the huge federal subsidies for wind turbines and solar panels would seem less of a drain on our economic growth.
Recently, moreover, the Congressional Research Service reported the U.S. has more fossil energy than any other nation when we total our coal, oil, natural gas and new shale gas and oil reserves.
Far from having "just 2 percent of the world's oil reserves" we have centuries worth of fossil fuels — which the Obama administration is committed to not using.
The food inflation, too, is now Obama's. Under both Bush and Obama, the federal government has cheerfully diverted huge amounts of grain to auto fuel, creating an artificial food shortage. That's triggered food price inflation for the poorest around the world. Corn ethanol may be "renewable," but the subsidies make it very expensive to use.
Why not remove the federal subsidy and let ethanol compete? Mainly because ethanol isn't competitive or effective. And it's down right disastrous for the environment.
Right now, farm woodlots are being drained in the Corn Belt and tropical forest is being cleared for more corn and palm oil in Southeast Asia, responding to high crop prices. This is not a sustainable solution.
Last year, Stanford University praised Norman Borlaug's Green Revolution for saving about 7 million square miles of wildlife habitat from being plowed for more low-yield crops. Without the higher crop yields, we'd have gassed off soil carbon — as nitrous oxide — equal to one-third of the world's industrial emissions since 1850!
The Stanford message is clear: Don't clear wildlife habitat for trivial purposes. And this seems a trivial purpose — whether or not you believe in man-made global warming. Ethanol won't make much difference.
Why not clean-burn coal, gas and oil to make the electricity we need and admit the "green" solutions so far just don't work. Trillions of taxpayer dollars are poured into wind, solar and ethanol and none has proved to be an effective means of producing energy.
If the goal is to reduce CO2, the effort has not only failed, but the need is appearing less and less valid. Thus far, the computer models have been wrong.
The Pacific Ocean, our largest heat sink, has entered a cool phase and the tree rings and coral samples tell us it will probably last for the next 25 years.