A real energy policy would have been helpful
Gasoline prices keep going up and the consumer is getting hammered with gas well over three dollars.   In 2008 the soaring cost of energy was the fuse that kicked off the US  recession that was ultimately driven by the financial crisis.  Both  issues were made worse by the federal government's interference in the  marketplace.  The US economy is set for a repeat of 2008 because the White House never learned from the root causes of the recession.
The unrest in the middle east showing no signs of abating and international bad boy Iran is being as provocative as it thinks it can get away with. The US seems frozen by indecision  and shows no clear leadership on the middle east protests for self  determination.  These facts invariably mean that oil prices will  continue to be extremely volatile, and large consumers (like airlines  and power producers) will hedge their bets by buying and hoarding as  much as they can afford.  Gas prices are going to continue to be pushed  up and the economy is going to suffer as a result.
Some of the volatility in the market place could have been avoided  if we had a President that took energy production seriously. Instead the  US government turned on its proven energy producers by canceling oil and gas leases  and threatening a carbon tax scheme that discouraged investment.  Through regulation and red tape millions of acres of potential oil and  gas reserves are now off limits to exploration. The Obama administration  used the BP oil spill as an excuse to illegally hamstring domestic energy production, even going so far as to lie about what experts had recommended. 
President Obama with the help of its democratic majority in both houses of congress poured millions of dollars into "green energy" companies like Solyndra that later laid off workers and closed one of its plants.  The President ignored ample evidence  that his green jobs initiative wouldn't work, and has spent billions.   The money spent hasn't moved the US one inch closer to energy  independence.  
Some commentators question if these actions are some part of a master plan to raise gasoline prices  to make other forms of energy competitive. The problem with that  analysis is that it assumes that President Obama understands the  economics of his decisions. Based on his public arguments for health  care reform, green energy, and unemployment, I have to assume that the  President just doesn't understand the consequences of his actions. He is  an idealist and will not be swayed by the reality on the ground until  that reality effects his re-election chances or the consequences get so  dire that they can be no longer ignored (See tax cuts, Guantanamo,  predator drones, etc).
Oil and gas production is a long term play, with up to five years  between the discovery of oil and the build out of sufficient  infrastructure to bring that oil to market. Even if Obama had fully  embraced domestic energy production, the country still wouldn't be in an  energy independent position.  The difference is that we would be two  years closer, and more importantly there would have been thousands of  jobs created that would not have to be subsidized by the tax payer. The  President would have shown strong leadership that would have eased  market place fears if he had endorsed a strong domestic production  agenda. The price for market confidence can't be over stated in an  environment where fear drives speculation.
Alas the President traded a long term strategic vision for a short  sighted, short term political gain. Unfortunately we are all paying for  that short sightedness right now.  When the economy stumbles President  Obama will also pay, at the ballot box in 2012, and he will have no one  to blame but himself.
 Aaron Gee is a U.S.-based IT consultant who started the blog foundingideals.com.




