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merica
has a lot to worry about right now, but one of the biggest worries
haunting the intelligentsia is that our greed, our sloth, our self-indulgent
lifestyle has given Islamic nations the economic equivalent of the
nuclear bomb the feared "oil weapon" the
existence of which is said to jeopardize our ability to vanquish
terrorism in the Middle East.
Of course,
there's debate about how best to take this potential weapon away
from our enemies kill caribou, kill SUVs, subsidize renewables,
take your pick but there's no debate from either the Left
or Right about the economic firepower of the oil weapon or the need
to disarm it. And that's too bad because, in fact, the oil weapon
is a myth and belief in that myth is crippling U.S. foreign policy.
First, let's
dispel the notion that we need to worry about an oil embargo directed
at the United States. Once oil is in a tanker or refinery, there
is no controlling its destination. During the 1973 embargo on the
United States and the Netherlands, for instance, oil that was exported
to Europe was simply resold to the United States or ended up displacing
non-OPEC oil that was diverted to the U.S. market. Saudi oil minister
Sheik Yamani conceded afterwards that the 1973 embargo "did
not imply that we could reduce imports to the United States
the world is really just one market. So the embargo was more symbolic
than anything else."
Second, OPEC
is hardly in a position to punish the industrialized nations with
a radical production cutback. That's because one of the main causes
of instability in the region is declining oil revenues. Saudis who've
gotten used to living on the state's generous oil dole, for example,
are now finding that the dole has been cut by 70 percent since 1980
and that jobs are scarce. Because there's no other source of revenue
for these economies other than oil, a major production cutback would
bankrupt the OPEC countries and almost certainly trigger revolutions.
But would such
a cutback hurt us more than it would hurt them? Well, the only reason
we pay any attention to Arab political sentiment is because they've
got oil. If they weren't selling oil, they'd have all the global
political influence and military capability of, say, Uganda. That
explains reports that al Qaeda recruitment tapes and captured documents
implore terrorists to leave the Persian Gulf oil fields and tankers
alone.
What if terrorists,
however, did blow up refining or pipeline facilities to destabilize
world oil markets and moderate Arab regimes? In the short run the
relationship between supplies and price in oil markets is about
0.1. That is, a 1 percent reduction in supplies induces a 10 percent
increase in price. In 1990 after the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, world
oil production decreased from 61 million barrels a day (mbd) to
56.5 mbd, or by about 7.4 percent. Oil prices increased from $18
to almost $31, or about 72 percent. World output is now 68 mdb,
with the Mideast accounting for 21mbd (30.9 percent) and Saudi Arabia
accounting for 8mbd (11.8 percent). So a complete Saudi shutdown
would produce at least 120 percent increase in price (from $19 to
almost $42) while a Mideast shutdown would produce over a 300 percent
increase (from $19 to $76).
For those who
think such prices are unimaginable, think again. We have already
experienced them. The average cost of crude oil used by U.S. refineries
in 1981 was $35.24. That is just over $60 at today's prices. To
be sure, most Americans don't have fond memories of 1981, but we
survived.
But what about
a more modest cutback; say, a move to bring oil prices to $30-40
a barrel? Such prices are always possible, but there's little chance
that OPEC could engineer them in today's economy. Demand is slumping
because of a global economic downturn and major non-OPEC producers
Mexico, Norway, and Russia do not appear to be interested
in reducing output. Panic buying at the outset of a Middle Eastern
war could conceivably deliver those prices, but production cutbacks
probably could not.
But more to
the point, politics has nothing to do with OPEC production decisions
despite the ardent desire of the producing nations to have us believe
otherwise. Oil economist M.A. Adelman argues that never once in
OPEC's history has the cartel or any member in it left money on
the table to pursue some political objective. When the Ayatollah
Khomeini knocked off the Shah in 1979, the oil kept flowing. When
U.S. bombs rained down on Libya's Muammar Qaddafi in 1986, the oil
kept flowing. We had to impose an embargo on Iraq's Sadaam
Hussein to get him to stop selling oil to the world market.
Moreover, there
is not and has never been any correlation between OPEC "price
hawks" and "price doves" and how those OPEC members
felt about America or the industrialized West in general.
But even if
you think that OPEC has the means and motive to use this alleged
oil weapon, there's not a thing we can do about it. First, even
if every drop of oil we consumed came from Oklahoma, Texas, and
Alaska, a cutback in OPEC production would raise domestic oil prices
as high as if all our oil came from Saudi Arabia. That's because
there are no regional markets for oil only global markets
and because prices always reflect opportunity costs in free
markets, regional prices invariably rise to the world price. In
1979, for instance, Great Britain was "energy independent"
virtually all the crude oil it consumed came from the North
Sea. But the oil price spike of 1979 hit Great Britain as hard as
it hit Japan, a country dependent upon imports for its oil. No country
can wall itself off from the world market.
The frequently
heard call for accelerated deployment of renewable energy technologies
is likewise silly. Even if there were some amazing technological
breakthrough that allowed the market share of renewable energy to
rise from its present 2 percent to, say, 40 percent, it wouldn't
reduce oil imports a single drop. That's because renewable energy
is a technology that generates electricity while oil is a fuel that
powers vehicles and never the twain shall meet
at least not
in the foreseeable future.
Nor would transportation-related
energy-efficiency improvements, like increased CAFÉ standards
for light trucks, have as much impact on oil imports as their proponents
claim. That's because all other things being equal
the more efficiently we use energy, the lower the marginal cost
of consuming goods or services produced by energy. And if we lower
the marginal costs of energy consumption, some of the potential
energy savings will disappear because of an increase in vehicle
miles traveled.
But if we could
stick to such an economic diet, wouldn't using less oil reduce Arab
oil revenues and thus prove a useful patriotic act? It's hard to
see how. Declining oil revenues increase instability in moderate
Arab states and thus make more likely bin Laden takeovers in countries
such as Saudi Arabia.
Fear of the
oil weapon has unduly affected our foreign policy, provided cover
for an endless host of subsidies and preferences, and is repeatedly
marshaled to support policy agendas from both the Left and Right
that can't otherwise stand on their own two feet. The sooner we
get over this fetishistic loathing of oil imports, the better.
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