The Marketing Magic Behind Rising Gas Prices
Sometimes only a clichÃ?© can do justice to an unjust situation–those who do not learn from history are destined to repeat it. Yet here we are, a nation of car lovers swallowing the big oil companies’ explanation–hook, line and sinker. Like little fish, we jiggle and wiggle, making the hook sink deeper, sold on the benefits of raising families in the suburbs, the safety advantage of a big car in collisions and the efficiency of high-speed highways that link us to workplaces. Americans believe press statements regarding the high price of oil as if marketing professionals are bound by rules of patriotism. “By the year 2000, a total of 900 billion barrels of oil had been produced. Total world oil production in 2000 was 25 billion barrels. If world oil consumption continues to increase at an average rate of 1.4 percent a year, and no further resources are discovered, the world’s oil supply will not be exhausted until the year 2056,” writes David Deming in “How Much Oil is Left?”
“The estimates above do not include unconventional oil resources. Conventional oil refers to oil that is pumped out of the ground with minimal processing; unconventional oil resources consist largely of tar sands and oil shales that require processing to extract liquid petroleum. Unconventional oil resources are very large. In the future, new technologies that allow extraction of these unconventional resources likely will increase the world’s reserves.” You can read the entire article at the National Center for Policy Analysis by following the link below.
Marketing departments are responsible to the companies they work for and concern themselves with positioning, promotion and price. Their marketing plans don’t consider whether a family bypasses prescribed medication to put gas in the car so Dad can make a living.
What’s the solution in a free-enterprise, market-driven economy? The solution should be simple. Congress should remember our government is for the people, by the people and end the gas-gouging on moral grounds. Instead of acting on behalf of the majority, they’re held back by the lining of their pants pockets, firmly held by a minority–lobbyists for big oil interests. They can get away with this as long as Americans have better things to do than email their congressional representatives. In order for this to be truly a government for the people, by the people; you must participate. If you don’t vote and you don’t make your wishes known to your representatives in Congress; complaints about the high price of commodities fall under idle chit-chat. Complain where it counts and work for change through the democratic process.