Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Streetsblog

U.S. Trade Deficit Joined at the Hip to U.S. Oil Dependence

false

When it comes to our ongoing economic crisis, you don't have to look too far to find connections to America's oil addiction.

It's hard to imagine, for example, how we'll ever put a stop to wild cyclical fluctuations when a relatively minor change in the price of crude can send shock waves through almost every sector of the economy. Then there's the impact of poorly thought-out public investments in oil-intensive, low-density sprawl, to which some have assigned a large helping of blame for the housing crisis.

Superstar blogger Matt Yglesias at Think Progress takes a look at another angle -- the impact of oil imports on the balance of international trade. An under-appreciated portion of the U.S. trade deficit is the result, he writes, not of China's rising stature or U.S. manufacturing losses, but of oil imports and oil addiction:

Now it’s not unusual that the US is a net oil importer. Most countries are. But America is a much more oil-dependent country than other places are. We have more anti-density regulations, more subsidization of big houses, less taxation of gasoline, less investment in mass transit, etc. than most developed countries. This isn’t really a coincidence.

The United States was a net oil exporter in the late-1940s. So we had a postwar industrial policy paradigm built around suburbanization and powerful firms in the oil and automobile sectors. The problem is that we’re not a net oil exporter anymore by a long shot. But we still have a policy paradigm build around encouraging lavish consumption of gasoline. Under the circumstances, we’d have to run a really enormous surplus in goods and services to cover the oil gap.

Elsewhere on the Network today: Bike Portland looks at the upsurge in advocacy groups for pedestrians, who have traditionally lacked the organizational capacity of cycling interests. The Dirt presents the position that the U.S. needs to move beyond the goal of sustainability to efforts aimed at actually restoring natural resources. And Bike Delaware lauds a bipartisan proposal to raise the federal gas tax by 25 cents.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Mamdani Uses ‘Sammy’s Law’ To Reduce Speed Limits To 15 MPH At Schools, But Broader Implementation Is Stalled

By the end of this year, 800 more streets in front of public school buildings will get 15-mile-per-hour speed limits, bringing the citywide total to 1,300. It's a start.

Amazon Owes Nearly $10M Unpaid Fines for Idling in New York City

The online retail giant owes more than any other other company issued fines through the city's Citizens Air Complaint Program.

March 16, 2026

Mamdani Administration Wants To Allow A Brooklyn Hospital To Issue Parking Tickets

Could parking tickets be written by someone other than NYPD traffic agents and cops? Time will tell if this is a good idea or not.

March 16, 2026

Bus Companies Say There’s a Better Way to Take a ‘Great American Road Trip’ This Summer

As Americans start planning their summer vacations, the country’s largest inter-city bus operator is challenging them to leave their cars at home.

March 16, 2026

Monday’s Headlines: Beware of ‘Fraud’ Fraud Edition

The governor keeps pushing her Uber-backed car insurance plan. And we keep pushing back. Plus other news.

March 16, 2026

Hired Actors, Paid Media: Big Tech Has Already Dumped $8M Into Hochul’s Car Insurance Ploy

Buckets of cash and ads with professional actors are boosting Uber and Hochul's cause.

March 13, 2026
See all posts