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Economist

Tim Snyder

Tim is an economist and works extensively in the field of applied economics. A graduate of Texas Tech University with a B.S. degree in Agriculture and Applied Economics, Tim has collaborated with several universities across the United States, working primarily in the areas of commodity pricing, market development and policy. His extensive experience of over 35 years as an Applied Economist has provided a substantial background from which he draws. Tim’s company, Matador Economics, Inc, was founded in September of 2005 where his initial focus was on marketing and business development for energy and agriculture. He specifically focused on developing ethanol and biodiesel biorefineries, across the US and abroad. After the financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, Tim shifted the focus of the company to providing a marketing function for the biofuels industry, within the distribution chain for the refined products. He has worked with several terminal operations across the U.S. and abroad. Tim’s in depth experience and research in the commodity markets spans 40 plus years. Today, he publishes a daily and weekly commentary for oil and gas and the refined products and covers energy policy as well. Additionally, Tim has co-hosted a radio program in West Texas and the Permian Basin, for the last 18 years and covers Energy and Agriculture. He also serves as a subject matter expert for several Fox-affiliated radio programs across the US. Tim was formerly licensed securities registered representative, commodities broker and held several other securities licenses, giving him substantial experience in risk management as well.

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Contributor Brief·Tim Snyder · 2 articles
Updated May 2, 2024

Energy independence shields economies; renewable transition threatens prosperity

Snyder argues that crude oil dominance and fossil fuel energy independence are structural safeguards against economic recession and currency instability, not relics to be abandoned. He contends that premature renewable energy transition—driven by external pressure rather than market readiness—risks destabilizing the macroeconomic foundations that protect American prosperity and geopolitical leverage.

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global energy and economic systems under simultaneous strain

America's crude oil dominance helped avoid a recession by insulating the economy from external shocks.

America's Crude Oil Dominance Helped Avoid a Recession

Snyder's framework: energy security as recession protection mechanism

Fossil fuel energy independence9
Renewable energy transition readiness4
Currency system stability via energy leverage8
Vulnerability to global alliances shifts7

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32%Fossil fuel
Fossil fuel energy independence
Renewable energy transition readiness
Currency system stability via energy leverage
Vulnerability to global alliances shifts

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international currency foundation threatened by energy realignment

Shifting global alliances challenge the foundation of international currency systems through energy strategy competition.

Navigating the Complex World of Energy and Economics

The US shouldn't bow down to renewable energy pressure without understanding macroeconomic consequences.

America's Crude Oil Dominance Helped Avoid a Recession

Energy independence is the invisible pillar protecting American economic stability and global influence.

Themes:Energy independence as economic recession bufferRenewable transition risks to currency systemsGeopolitical leverage through fossil fuel dominance

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  • AM
    Alex M.·2h agoquestion

    What sparked your research into disruptive innovation?

    Curious what the original insight was that led you to the Innovator's Dilemma framework.

  • SL
    Sophia L.·1d agoidea

    Would love a deep-dive into EdTech adoption barriers.

    Your framing of sustaining vs. disruptive innovation feels directly applicable to school systems.

  • DR
    David R.·3d agoquestion

    How do you see AI changing the personalized learning landscape?