Interesting points but the assumption that $2/gal gas = millions of laid off oil workers does not tie.
We have decades of data and trends allowing producers and policy makers to carefully balance the supply with demand while still ensuring people stay employed.
This is not directed at you, but the current "deals" and policy creation is as if we just started consuming oil and gas last month. It's absurd.
You're right, they aren't intrinsically tied together. But at this point and time, they somewhat are.
The reason prices are what they are right now, is directly tied to a policy that was put in place ~2 years ago, in a successful attempt to not allow our (local US) oil industry to collapse into itself. And it worked very well in doing so. The downside being that the deal had a shelf life that was way too long for how things panned out.
Like I said, I have no idea if changing that deal is a possibility. but the deal was tied to a much larger global alliance (largely, the arms deal between the Saudis and us and our military support) that has been in place for like 8 decades now. I wouldn't be surprised if that deal couldn't really be touched, as I'm nearly sure we were on the shorter end of it to some capacity (simply because we benefited, again locally). Not to mention, OPEC didn't want to cut production, we did.
Note: largely personal opinions from here on out:
Maybe they could change it. That I don't know. But what I do know, and as someone who very likely donates more time and money than most to the party that directly put this play in action, is where the current problem stems from. And that's what aggravates me.
I think we have a two-fold problem, personally. First being a spiderweb of insane global policies in place, and second, US oil companies who are absolutely terrified to lose money - which is a
very common occurrence - because they are raking that **** in right now and know the gravy train isn't forever.
If I were in the hot seat, I'd be pressing US oil companies to find out why they aren't producing more even though they absolutely have the capacity to do so. Make them say that they are currently making money hand over foot, and want to keep the status quo. Then I'd pressure them to either make ends meet or tell them we'd be going offshore and leaving them in our dust. Not very US-business-friendly, but that's how the unfortunate cookie crumbles. And I'd bet one of the majors would step up, and the rest would follow suit. But, again, that's just me not knowing the behind the scenes of what's actually going on in this market.
I also can't confidently say that gas prices would be any different today, regardless of who was in charge, either. That deal would have been in place either way - so unless Trump walked back his own deal with OPEC, we'd still be short through 4/22. And I'd argue that no one really knows how things would be, either. It's easy to point fingers, but I've yet to see any concrete "hows" anywhere, beyond "oh just pump more lol" - which if I think was an option,
someone would be doing just that.