People's Democracy(Weekly Organ of the Communist Party of India (Marxist) |
Vol.
XXIX
No. 35 August 28, 2005 |
Oil
Prices And The World Economy
C
P Chandrasekhar
WITH
headlines tracking the ever-rising price of oil, the lack of any major effect of
the shock on global growth has become the subject of discussion and speculation.
Taking one of the many internationally traded varieties of relevance to
developing Asia, the price per barrel of Dubai Fateh crude averaged $28 in
February 2004, around $35 between May and December 2004, nearly $40 in February
2005, crossed $45 in March and $50 in June and stood at $55 in mid-August. Other
varieties like American light crude have crossed the $65-per-barrel mark in
international markets in recent weeks.
GROWTH
DRIVEN PRICE
RISE OF OIL
The
fundamental reason why prices have risen so dramatically is that
demand—especially driven by growth in the US, China and India—has
outstripped the capacity of the industry to pump out crude and refine it. Global
demand is estimated to have risen by 2.7 million barrels per day in 2004, the
highest since 1976. Nearly a third of that growth came from China, where oil
consumption soared by around 16 per cent in 2004. On the other hand capacity has
not been expanding to meet this growing demand. As a result, surplus capacity in
the oil producing system is limited. Spare capacity in 2004 is estimated to have
fallen to 1 million barrels per day (b/d), its lowest level in 20 years. Saudi
Arabia, the country which sits on the largest share of global reserves and which
was responsible for increasing availability when supplies were tight in the
past, is also nearing its limits. Given the nature of
the industry, supply can adjust only with a considerable lag, since investment
requirements are large and involve substantial gestation lags. Investment has
not kept pace with demand partly because of the low oil prices of the 1990s,
when the average real price of oil was half that in the 1980s.
The effects of medium term excess demand on prices have been aggravated by a number of factors that have increased uncertainty. The most important is, of course, the continued occupation of Iraq by the US and its allies and the strong resistance of the Iraqi people to that occupation. The inability thus far of the US army to contain the armed struggle, despite the use of violence even when it endangers civilians, has reduced exports and led to expectations of uncertain future supplies from Iraq. In addition, the war has precipitated terrorist attacks in the world's largest oil producer, Saudi Arabia, that has affected oil supplies, even if temporarily. So long as the threat of such attacks remains, supplies are uncertain and prices are buoyant.
The
net result has been that any development that affects or could affect supplies
from any other country triggers a price increase. This could be political
uncertainty in Nigeria, the battle for control of Yukos in Russia, civil strife
and oil industry strikes in Venezuela or fears of the impact of Hurricane Dennis
on US oil supplies. All of these have in the recent past substantially affected
prices at the margin and even led to a spike in prices.
The
upward pressure on prices that result from these developments has been further
exaggerated by speculative investments by financial investors in oil markets.
The base for speculation seems even greater since the sharp price increases of
recent times have not spurred inflation, curbed growth and forced a cutback in
demand. The dissociation between the level of oil prices and the rate of global
expansion only strengthens expectations of further price increases.
One
explanation advanced for this lack of association between oil prices and growth
is the fact that the real price of oil, which adjusts the nominal price increase
to take account of changes in the prices of commodities other than oil, is by no
means at a peak. Thus, in terms of 2005 dollars, the 1980 price of Arabian
Light, which was $35.69 in nominal terms, amounted to $84.29. That is $25 per
barrel or 40 per cent higher than today’s price in real terms.
DEMAND
FOR OIL IS
PUZZLING
However,
the fact that in absolute terms today’s real price of oil is far short of its
historic peak does not detract from the fact that recent increases in that price
have been dramatic and that the real price of oil is at a 15-year high. So the
persistence of growth and demand for oil is indeed puzzling. It suggests that
the expectation that rising nominal oil prices would trigger contraction in
government spending to smother inflation, as happened at the time of the second
oil shock at the end of the 1970s, has not been realised. One reason for this
could be that the impact of oil price increases on the balance of payments is
not immediately debilitating because of the greater access to foreign exchange
of the big spenders. Many countries have been able to finance a rising oil
import bill without much difficulty. For example, China keeps sucking in oil
despite higher prices because of the consistently high increase in its export
earnings; India manages because of large IT-related revenues and capital
inflows; some other developing countries are able to stay afloat because of
remittances from migrant workers; and the US pulls through because of capital
flows that finance its burgeoning trade deficit and make it the world’s
largest debtor nation.
Thus the fact that the world is awash with liquidity that can be accessed in the form of foreign revenues, debt, portfolio investments or foreign direct investment by countries that are better off has helped ensure that a sharp contraction of the kind triggered by the second oil shock has not occurred. The resulting persistence in strong demand for oil has contributed to buoyancy in prices because supply too has not been responsive to price increases.
IMPLICATIONS
OF GLOBAL
OIL SCENARIO
These features of the global oil scenario have two implications. First, it is likely that prices are likely to remain high for some time to come even if the era of cheap oil is not altogether over. Second, as and when specific developments threaten to affect or actually do affect oil supplies from any existing location, a further spike in oil prices is a real possibility.
But
already there are signs that things may change. To start with, not all countries
are in a position to cope with the current price of oil. Many poor countries
cannot access foreign credits with the ease that characterises the more
developed even among the developing. But that is not all. Even some of the more
developed countries in developing Asia have been badly affected in 2005, when
prices have continued to rise and the discount on the West Asian varieties they
import has fallen sharply. Asia, which imports 70 per cent of its oil from the
Middle East, has received a larger oil shock this year than last. Countries are
finding it increasingly difficult to maintain retail fuel subsidies. Thailand
abandoned subsidies in August, while other governments, such as India’s, have
raised prices despite opposition. In the event growth and oil demand are likely
to fall.
Thus
the hike in oil prices is bound to have an adverse effect on the global system
soon. What is not certain is the nature and location of that adverse effect.
Fears of a global recession arise because the already high US trade deficit is
widening sharply. Clearly, if prices rise further, global growth could indeed
stall. However, that projection hinges on the perceived trade-off between growth
and inflation, and is predicated on the assumption that oil prices increases
will lead to more general inflation. Governments attempting to combat inflation
will then embark upon contractionary fiscal and monetary policies, which will
bring down inflation but also imply lower rates of aggregate economic growth.
OIL
PRICE HIKE MAY NOT LEAD TO INFLATION
It is correct to assume that governments across the world remain obsessed with inflation control, because the political economy configurations that have led to the domination of finance still persist. However, the prior assumption, that oil price hikes necessarily lead to higher inflation, may not be so valid any more.
Certainly
it is true that for a very long period—in fact almost the whole of the second
half of the 20th century— oil prices showed a strong relationship to aggregate
inflation rates in the world economy. Between 1970 and 2000, for example, world
trade prices and oil prices were strongly positively correlated and in the
largest economy, the US, the Consumer Price Index inflation tracked movements in
world oil prices.
But,
there is evidence that this relationship may have changed. Though oil prices
have been exceptionally volatile recently, such fluctuations appear to have had
little impact on aggregate inflation rates in either developed or developing
countries. Rather, such inflation rates have been relatively stable and even
fallen slightly compared to the earlier decade.
So
what has changed in the world economy to cause such an apparently established
relationship to break down? The first important factor is the reduced dependence
of the industrial economies upon oil imports, at least in quantitative terms.
For the group of industrial countries in the OECD, net oil imports accounted for
2.4 per cent of GDP in 1978, but have since fallen continuously, to amount to
only one per cent of GDP.
But
the second factor may be even more significant. This is a distributional shift,
whereby the burden of adjustment to higher oil prices is essentially borne by
workers across the world and non-oil primary commodity producers in the
developing countries. These prices do not rise in tandem with oil prices and in
some cases have declined. This means that even though energy is a universal
intermediate good, its price rise does not cause prices of many other
commodities to increase anywhere near proportionately. This in turn enables
aggregate inflation levels to remain low even though oil prices may be
increasing.
WORKERS
BEAR THE
BRUNT
It
is well-known that the period since the early 1990s has been once of a
substantial decline in the bargaining power of workers vis-à-vis capital in
most of the world, and this has been reflected in declining wage shares of
national income and real wages that are either stagnant or growing well below
productivity increases. This provides a significant amount of slack in terms of
the ability of employers to bear other input cost increases. In addition, this
disempowerment of workers also means that such input cost increases can be
passed on without attracting demands for commensurate increases in money wages
in the current period.
Along with workers, agriculturalists and other non-oil primary commodity producers have also been adversely affected and been forced to take on some of the burden of adjustment. Indeed, even manufacturing producers from developing countries have been adversely affected in a situation where intense competitive pressure has ensured that they cannot pass on all their input cost increases.
INEVITABILITY
OF GLOBAL
RECESSION
Thus,
even if growth persists despite rising oil prices, the distribution of the
benefits of that growth is likely to be extremely unequal. But even growth is
likely to be unequally distributed. In the case of the poorer, oil importing
developing countries, the effects of higher oil prices are already adverse and
can get worse. These countries have much smaller volumes of remittance incomes
from abroad and cannot access large capital inflows. Thus they have to
adjust to rising oil prices by squeezing demand through contractionary policies
that reduce domestic incomes and increase unemployment. This is the only way
they can deal with their balance of payments difficulties.
So long as these sections are forced to bear a disproportionate share of the burden, the current oil shock may not seem a big problem. But if for some reason they cannot be called upon to do so a global recession may be inevitable.