- $1 billion Empire State Building IPO: why it won't be like Facebook IPO
- In surprise move, GOP leaders admit defeat in payroll tax battle
- More than 30,000 Germans turn out against anti-piracy treaty ACTA
- Does Obama blueprint reduce budget deficit fast enough? (+video)
- Pentagon budget: Does it pit active-duty forces against retirees? (+video)
- Murdoch media crisis deepens with five new arrests
- How Pinterest combines the best parts of Facebook, Tumblr, and Etsy
- US, China face 'trust deficit' as China's heir apparent visits
If Saudis pump more oil, will gasoline prices fall?
(Page 2 of 2)
Even in the oil business, few want a truly free market. They prefer price stability, rather than the volatile prices associated with unmanaged output of a commodity. Major OPEC producers don't want a price so high it encourages non-OPEC production and real conservation.
The problem today is that OPEC is "not very efficient," says Fadhil Chalabi, executive director of the Centre for Global Energy Studies, a think tank in London created by Yamani. "OPEC should improve its skills of managing supply." (Dr. Chalabi comes from Iraq, but from a different branch of the Chalabi family from Ahmad Chalabi, the Pentagon's former favorite to lead a free Iraqi government.)
OPEC had indicated a goal of keeping the price of oil in a range of $22 to $28 a barrel. It even planned a cut in production quotas at the end of March. But, complains Chalabi, when the demand for oil in booming China and the US skyrocketed, OPEC did not abide by its own strategy, failing to raise output.
Now $28 is seen as a floor.
OPEC members are too much influenced by their short-term need to maximize revenue, rather than their long-term interest in maintaining the world market for oil, he says.
Further roiling the oil markets is the uncertainty over Iraq and Saudi Arabia. Though Iraq probably has the world's largest reserves after Saudi Arabia (excluding Canada's oil sands), sabotage knocked its oil output last month to about 1.8 million b.p.d. Production could be restored to 2 million b.p.d. this month - and perhaps 3 million b.p.d. by year's end, if all goes well.
"The real fear of the market is that if anything happens to Iraqi oil, there is no extra capacity in the world to compensate," Chalabi says.
Such a scenario could damage the US and world economic recovery.
Since the end of 2001, gasoline prices have risen about 90 cents a gallon in the US, notes Irwin Kellner, an economist at Hofstra University in Hempstead, N.Y. That takes $90 billion out of the economy, money not available for other purchases of goods and services since most of it goes for oil imports rather than to a shrinking number of domestic producers.
It is a drag equivalent to 28.5 percent of the $316 billion in stimulus provided by the three Bush federal tax cuts in fiscal years 2001 through '03, Dr. Kellner notes. The hike in energy prices, he adds, raises the risk of "stagflation" - the combination of more inflation and slow growth that plagued the 1980s.
Some analysts are not so gloomy. For instance, Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Mass., suspects that US gasoline prices will drop after July, with extra Saudi production arriving on the East Coast, holiday driving diminishing, and conservation (car pooling, etc.) having a modest impact.
Ironically, the last time oil surged above $40 a barrel, Iraq had just invaded Kuwait in 1990. By removing Saddam Hussein, the current President Bush hoped to create more political and economic stability in the Middle East.
So far, though, the invasion has created uncertainty and higher oil prices. Whether that will hurt President Bush's prospects for reelection is debatable.
Page:
1 | 2



