Eric R. A. N., Juliet Carlisle, Kristy Michaud
(Department of Political Science, University
of California, Santa Barbara)
In every energy crisis the U.S. has faced—beginning with the first crisis
in 1973—we have seen a common sequence of events, which has been labelled
the “energy crisis cycle” (Smith 2002). The steps in the cycle are:
(1) When the demand for energy exceeded the supply, energy prices rose
sharply — starting the energy crisis cycle.
(2) Along with increases in energy prices came large increases in the
profits of energy producers.
(3) Politicians and interest group advocates criticized the energy industry
for their greed in profiting at other people’s misfortune, and charged
them with manipulating prices to increase profits. Some critics even claimed
that the energy industry fabricated the energy crisis to increase profits.
(4) Most of the public believed the industry critics. They did not accept
claims that the energy crisis was real, and so they felt justified in
demanding that the government fix the problem without any cost to the
public.
(5) In response to public demands, some politicians sought to protect
the public from high prices with price controls or subsidies—steps that
worsened the crisis because they encouraged energy consumption in a time
of shortages. In our paper, we investigate the causes of distrust in the
oil industry during the 2000-2002 period of high gasoline prices. To do
so, we use a public opinion survey of Californians, which included a battery
of questions about trust in the oil industry, in government officials
regulating the oil industry, and in environmental groups, as well as a
specific question asking whether respondents believed that the oil industry
was manipulating prices to increase profits. We model trust as a function
of basic values (party identification, ideology, egalitarianism, individualism,)
and political awareness, using the approach mapped out by John Zaller
in The Nature and Origins of Mass Opinion. Although we cannot investigate
the dynamic way in which distrust builds over time as energy prices rise,
we can explore the sorts of people who accept competing explanations for
the energy crisis.
Download this paper in Adobe Acrobat format: http://www.ucei.berkeley.edu/PDF/EPE_006.pdf
The document can be downloaded or viewed using Adobe's Acrobat Reader
(version 4.0 or later). If you do not have Acrobat Reader, you can download
it from Adobe. To DOWNLOAD the documents right mouse click on the name and
then click again on "Save link as..."