Episode Synopsis "4. Price Controls in the Oil Industry"
The disappearance of oil has been forecast every decade. Prices were overlooked. When the price is high it is more profitable to look for oil. Total reserves on the ground are higher than they were in 1890. Treating demand as a fixed quantity, the oil industry tried to control production and prices. Gas rationing was implemented. 55 MPH limit was legislated without economic or safety benefit. Safety belts increased fatalities of pedestrians. Natural gas experienced increasing shortages when it became artificially cheap. An insane price structure led to the shut down of older wells.Part 4 of 14. Presented in 1986 at New York Polytechnic University.
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More episodes of the podcast Introduction to Microeconomics
- 1. Intro to Micro: Demand and Supply
- 2. Value
- 3. The Determination of Prices
- 4. Price Controls in the Oil Industry
- 5. Minimum Price Controls
- 6. Government Licensing of Industry and Minimum Wage
- 7. Mid-Term Review and The Theory of the Firm
- 8. The Firm
- 9. Monopoly and Competition
- 10. Government Cartels
- 11. The Structure of Production
- 12. Labor and Unions
- 13. The Labor Market
- 14. Interest Rates and Course Review