i~~
" '~ ~ i Energy Policy, Vol. 26, No. 1, pp. 55-69, 1998 © 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd Printed in Great Britain. All rights reserved 0301-4215/98 $19.00 + 0.00
ELSEVIER PII:S0301-4215(97)00102-X
The outlook for US oil dependence David L Greene* Senior Research Staff Center for Transportation Analysis, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, P.O. Box 2008, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6207, USA
Donald W Jones I and Paul N Leiby 2 Energy and Global Change Analysis, Oak Ridge National Laboratory, P.O. Box 2008, Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6205, USA
Oil dependence is defined as a dynamic problem of short- and long-run market power. The potential monopoly power of an oil cartel depends on its market share and the elasticities of oil supply and demand, while the economic vulnerability of oil-consuming states depends most directly on the quantity of oil imported and the oil cost share of gross domestic product (GDP). Of these factors, only the market share of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) cartel and the rate of growth of world oil demand are clearly different than they were 25 years ago. OPEC still holds the majority of world oil and, in the future, will regain market share. A hypothetical 2-year supply reduction in 2005-2006, similar in size to those of 1973-1974 or 1979-1980, illustrates the potential benefits to OPEC and harm to the US economy of a future oil price shock. OPEC's revenues are estimated to increase by roughly $0.7 trillion, while the US economy loses about $0.5 trillion. Strategic petroleum reserves seem ineffective against a determined, multi-year supply curtailment. Increasing the market's price responsiveness by improving the technologies of oil supply and oil demand can greatly reduce the costs of oil dependence. Each element of this interpretation of the oil dependence problem is well supported by previous studies. This paper's contribution is to unite these elements into a coherent explanation and to point out the enormously important implications for energy policy. © 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords. Energy security; Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC); Petroleum
Introduction Three times over the past 25 years disruptions of oil supplies from Persian Gulf producers have doubled or tripled world oil prices. In October 1973, the Arab members of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) announced an oil boycott against countries that aided Israel during the 'October War'. From September 1973 to December 1973, they reduced their crude oil production by 4.2 M M B D (million barrels per day). World oil prices doubled between October 1973 and January 1974. Again in 1979-1980, a 5.4 M MBD loss of production from Iran and Iraq, about 9% of world production, resulted in another doubling of the price of oil. From May to December of 1990, total oil output from Kuwait and Iraq fell by 4.8
*Corresponding author. Tel.: 001-423-574-5963; fax: 001-423-5743895; e-mail:
[email protected]. ~Tel.: 001-423-574-4626;tax: 001-423-574-3895. 2Tel.: 001-423-574-7720;lax: 001-423-574-3895.
MMBD, about 7.6°/,, of world oil production. From the second to the fourth quarter of 1990, oil prices shot up from $17.50 to $33 per barrel (1993 dollars)? This latest price shock was short lived, as Saudi Arabia put its enormous slack capacity to use, expanding production by 3 MMBD to make up most of the lost supply (Tatom, 1993, p. 138). The cost to the US of oil price shocks and supply manipulation by the OPEC cartel has been enormous. Recent estimates put the cumulative costs from 1972 to 1991 at about $4 trillion (Greene and Leiby, 1993). Will this ever happen again? Today, oil supplies are abundant, oil prices are relatively low and OPEC appears to be ineffective. Is the oil problem over? This paper addresses this question by examining the fundamental factors that create the potential for oil price shocks and those that determine their impacts on oilconsuming economies, asking how they have changed over
3Prices in this paper are 1993dollars, except where indicated otherwise.
56
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
the past quarter of a century and simulating the impacts of a possible future oil supply disruption. We first consider the factors that allow oil producers to influence prices. The distribution of world oil resources allows a small number of states, whose economies are dependent on oil sales, to supply a very significant share of the world market. Market share, together with the inelasticity of oil demand and supply by the rest of the world's producers, confers market power on these states, provided that they can cooperate to control production. The fact that short-run price elasticities are roughly an order of magnitude smaller than long-run elasticities gives an oil cartel enormous potential market power over a period of a few years, but this power can be exercised only by giving up market share, which inevitably leads to an erosion of market power. Thus huge increases in oil prices can be sustained for a few years, but not indefinitely. The dynamics of this process can explain the pattern of world oil prices and OPEC's market share over the past quarter of a century. OPEC sacrificed roughly half of its market share in defending higher oil prices during the 1980s. Since OPEC still holds the vast majority of the world's oil reserves, it is likely that its market share will continue to increase into the next century, restoring its potential market power. Next, we examine how oil price shocks harm the economies of oil-consuming countries by: (1) transferring national wealth to the economies of oilproducing states; (2) by lowering the potential level of domestic product; (3) by reducing further the gross domestic product (GDP) by temporarily causing less than full employment of the factors of production. These three additive effects have amounted to trillions of dollars in losses for the US economy over the past 25 years. US oil imports are now very near historic highs. Oil cost as a share of G D P has risen and fallen with oil prices, but now stands at about the same level as in 1972, immediately prior to the first oil price shock. Recent econometric studies suggest that the sensitivity of US G D P to oil price shocks has changed little in the past 20 years. Finally, a simulation of the world oil market and price impacts on the US economy is used to demonstrate the potential for future price shocks and economic losses. Beginning from a US Department of Energy (DOE) reference case projection, a 2-year supply cutback, equivalent in size to those of 1973-1974 and 1979-1980, is estimated to bring OPEC a windfall of about $0.7 trillion and cost the US economy $0.5 trillion. Whereas the use of strategic reserves is relatively ineffective in reducing either OPEC's profits or the damage to the US economy from such a prolonged price shock, it is shown that increasing the elasticities of oil demand and supply is potentially a very effective strategy. This points towards research and development into advanced technologies for oil supply and oil use, as well as alternative energy sources, as potentially the best strategies for coping with the problem of oil dependence. The ability of research and develop-
ment to change oil market fundamentals significantly, however, has yet to be demonstrated.
The oil problem Is the world 'running out of oir? Certainly, the world's oil resources are ultimately finite. However, this is the wrong question. The more relevant question is, 'Is the economic theory of exhaustible resources the appropriate theoretical context for analyzing the world oil market today?'. The answer to this question is no. Energy economists increasingly agree that the brilliant theory of depletable resources developed by Hotelling (1931) is not a particularly useful model of the world oil market. As Adelman (1990b) (p. 9) has pointed out time and again, 'Oil reserves are not a one-time stock to be used up, but an inventory, always being consumed and replenished by investment, in new and especially in old fields'. Despite several noteworthy efforts to modify the Hotelling model to capture the reality of the world oil market (eg Stiglitz, 1976; Gilbert, 1978; Alsmiller et al, 1985; Marshalla and Nesbitt, 1986), it remains an unrealistic representation of the nature of oil resources (Banks, 1986; Watkins, 1992). Mabro (1992) (p. 3) has identified the key reason why markets do not treat oil as a depletable resource: 'The geophysical limits may bite one day, but this day of reckoning is so far ahead as to have, on any conceivable assumption about discount rates, no impact on price'. This view was echoed by Gordon (1994) (p. 4) who pointed out that, in most cases, resource exhaustion is not a pressing problem either because the exhaustion costs are too low to matter or because the constraint on resources is non-binding. Considering the reserves of the OPEC countries, one finds that putative 'exhaustion dates' are so far in the future that it is hard to conceive how they could be relevant to OPEC's pricing policy, a Indeed, the user (depletion) cost of oil to Saudi Arabia in 1976 was about 2.5 cents per barrel (Adelman et al, 1991). Nor have increasing costs of finding and developing oil been a factor. Middle Eastern OPEC countries can expand their reserves with very little effort. Finding costs which, in non-OPEC areas are usually a significant component of production costs (Adelman, 1986b), are trivially low in the Middle East (A1-Chalabi, 1988a, p. 231). If the depletable resource model is inappropriate for oil, a much simpler model of world supply and demand can be used to understand the oil market. Since oil is much like any other commodity economies produce, in a competitive market the net price of oil (price minus marginal extraction costs) should rise over time only if development costs rise. However, development costs have been relatively stable since 1955 (Adelman, 1990a). This point is crucial because, if it is not the 4At 1992 production rates, the proved reserves of Saudi Arabia would last 85 years, those of Kuwait 250 years, the U.A.E.'s 115 years, Iraq's 135 years, Iran's 75 years and Libya's 40 years, according to Oil and Gas Journal estimates. The US Department of Energy (1996c) estimates that the proven reserves-to-production ratio tbr Persian Gulf producers is 83 years. Even with a 3% real discount rate, dollars 100 years from now are worth only 5 cents today.
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al W o r l d oil r e s o u r c e s e s t i m a t e s , 1993
Proved reservesv. Ultimateresources
• OPEC E~ U.S. [ ] ROW Figure 1
World oil resources estimates: 1993
inexorable economics o f exhausting the world's oil resources that causes world oil prices to rise, it must be something else, and that something else is the exercise o f market power.
The distribution of worm oil resources By an accident of geologic history, the member states of O P E C hold the lion's share of world oil resources by any measure (Figure 1). The Oil and Gas Journal estimates that O P E C countries contain 76% of the world's 1007 billion barrels of proved reserves of crude oil. Worm Oil, which puts reserves in the former USSR 130 billion barrels higher, has OPEC's share at 63% of 1107 billion barrels (US Department of Energy, 1996c, table 36). More inclusive estimates of petroleum resources show a similar pattern.5 The US Geological Survey puts remaining 'world ultimate resources' of oil at 1.6 trillion barrels, 60% more than reflected in proven reserves (Masters et al, 1994). Of these ultimate resources, OPEC countries hold just over 55% and the US just under 6'¼,.6 OPEC's own estimates put world undiscovered and discovered reserves at 1.5 trillion barrels, of which they believe they hold 64% (OPEC Secretariat, 1995). 7 At present, OPEC nations are producing at a rate of about 1% o f their ultimate resources per year. The rest of the world, however, is drawing down their resources at an average rate of 1.9"/o per year. The long-term trend is clear: an increasing O P E C share of world oil resources and of world oil production.
5Although acknowledging some uncertainty in their estimates, petroleum geologists seem confident in their general level:'We believethat worldwide, recoverable conventional oil and gas exist in ultimate quantities approximating 2300 billion barrels (370 Gm 3) of oil and 12,000 trillion cubic feet (340 Tm 3) of gas. These values are limited by our concepts of world petroleum geology and our understanding of specific basins; nonetheless, continued expansion of exploration activity, around the world, has resulted in only minimal adjustments to our quantitative understanding of ultimate resources.' (Masters et al, 1994). 6The most recent US Geological Survey (1995) assessment of technically recoverable resources puts the total slightly higher, at 112.6 billion barrels, up from 91.7 billion barrels. Although a significant change lbr the US, this is only about 1% of the total world estimates~ VAt 1992 consumption rates, the 1.6 trillion barrels of ultimate resources would last 65 years. Using advanced techniques to raise recovery rates to 60% would approximately double that number (OPEC Secretariat, 1995). There are, in addition, vast unconventional oil resources in the form of extra heavy oils, tar sands and oil shale.
57
The inelasticity of world oil supply and demand After the concentration of resources within the boundaries of a few countries, the most important determinant of the OPEC cartel's potential market power is the inability of supply and demand to respond quickly to shocks. The evidence is very consistent: long-run oil market elasticities are about ten times greater than short-run elasticities (Huntington, 1991, table 4; Huntington, 1994, appendix; Greene, 1991, table 1). This fundamental fact of world oil markets explains why m o n o p o l y pricing of oil can yield enormous profits for several years, but only at the expense of market share and the erosion of monopoly influence (Adelman, 1986c, p. 325). The most comprehensive assessments of oil market supply and demand elasticities have been conducted by the Energy Modeling Forum (Huntington, 1991, 1994). These provide a consensus that the short-run elasticity of oil demand is smaller (in absolute value) than -0.1, and that the longrun elasticity is smaller than -1.0. s At an oil price of approximately $30/barrel, short-run price elasticities of demand in Huntington's 1994 study of nine major world oil models range from -0.027 to -0.115, with a mean and median of -0.075. Long-run price elasticities of demand range from -0.157 to -2.544, with a mean of -0.562 and a median of -0.437. These average elasticities are consistent with recent studies by Gately and R a p p o p o r t (1988), Gately (1992), Huntington (1994) and Suranovic (1994). Oil supply is also very inelastic in the short run. The recent simulation analysis of Huntington (1994) used supply elasticities of 0.04 and 0.4 for short- and long-run responses to represent both the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and n o n - O E C D supply. A1-Sahlawi (1989), Huntington (1991 ), Suranovic (1994) and Gately (1995) report similar estimates tbr prices in the vicinity of $30/bbl. It is possible, indeed likely, that recent changes in the technology of oil exploration and drilling have changed the price elasticity of oil supply, but the change has yet to be measured.
The monopoly power of OPEC OPEC is an imperfect monopolistic cartel of the von Stackelberg type (Mabro, 1992). 9 A v o n Stackelberg monopolist differs from a pure monopolist in that it holds a large enough market share to influence prices, but its m o n o p o l y influence is limited by the existence of competitive suppliers. In fact, Dr Fadihl J A1-Chalabi, Deputy Secretary General of OPEC, described OPEC's role in just this way (A1-Chalabi., 1988b, p. 115). "As the only structured group of sellers in the world energy trade, OPEC can take pricing and production decisions which have a tar-reaching impact on the world energy market. Other energy sellers are scattered in separate entities, with no
~Throughout this paper, short-run elasticity applies to a period of l year. 9Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary defines a cartel as, '2: a combination of independent commercial or industrial enterprises designed to limit competition or fix prices'. Substitute states tbr commercial or industrial enterprises.
58
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
common, coordinated policy action other than the objective of securing and maintaining a market share at a price high enough to allow them to continue investing in the industry.' Empirical studies by Griffin (1985), Jones (1990), Dahl and Yficel (1991) and Gfilen (1996) have all rejected the hypothesis that OPEC's behavior is consistent with that of competitive producers. These studies generally agree that OPEC has functioned less than perfectly as a cartel and that its influence on world oil pries has been variable, but that the hypothesis that OPEC countries act as competitive producers can be rejected. The basis for the conclusions of these formal statistical tests is clear from an inspection of the oil production data of OPEC core members. When real prices tripled from 1973 to 1975, Kuwait, Libya, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela all decreased rather than increased output. Again, in the 1979-1982 period, while oil prices skyrocketed as a result of lost supply from Iran and Iraq during their bitter war, all the other core members consistently cut back production (Figure 2; US Department of Energy, 1997a, table 4). Competitive producers would have increased, not decreased, production in response to higher prices. If OPEC producers behaved competitively, the enormous differences between the market price and their costs for developing another barrel of oil would have induced them to expand production. At equilibrium in a competitive market, the marginal cost of more intensive or extensive development of existing pools should equal the marginal cost of finding oil, which should equal the marginal user cost, which should equal the market price minus the cost of development (Adelman et al, 1991, p. 219). Huge differences among countries in apparent user costs (market price minus marginal development costs) indicate that the market is not competitive. A competitive producer would fail to expand production while receiving huge rents on the marginal barrel produced (market price minus marginal development costs) only if he were unable to do so. In the Persian Gulf states, there is no shortage of developable, low-cost oil. Scrupulous analyses
Crude oil production by OPEC Core annual output relative to 1973
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Crude oil production by OPEC'Core': annual output relative to 1973 Figure 2
of oil development costs in OPEC nations have shown that the conditions for competitive markets are not close to being satisfied (Adelman and Ward, 1980; Adelman, 1986a, 1990a; Adelman et al, 1991). In 1978, the investment needed to develop an incremental barrel of oil in the US was 69 times that in Saudi Arabia (Adelman, 1986a, table 1). Updating the Adelman and Shahi (1989) estimates of OPEC's finding and lifting costs, Dahl and Yiicel (1991) concluded that, in all OPEC countries except Nigeria and Venezuela, costs were $2.20 per barrel or less. Nigeria and Venezuela's costs were estimated to be less than $4/bbl and Saudi Arabia's certainly less than $1/bbl. The US Department of Energy (1996b) estimates that future development, production and operating costs for the Persian Gulf region will remain low: $1.60 to $3.20/bbl. Adelman et al (1991) (p. 231) calculated that, in 1976, user costs based on marginal development costs were about 2.5 cents per barrel for Saudi Arabia, while the world market price was over $30/bbl and the in-ground value of US oil was $6.50. Adelman el" al (1991) (p. 231) concluded: 'This extraordinary gap in asset values is a symptom of the unbalanced world oil market, where low-cost reserves are kept out of production to maintain the price. Were the world oil monopoly to disappear, prices would fall to a fraction of their present levels.' Several estimates have been made of what oil prices would be if the world oil market was competitive. The most recent estimate by Griffin and Vielhaber (1994) put the competitive market price at $7.25 per barrel. Other estimates include Adelman (1989) of $6.25 per barrel, Morison (1987) with a range of $6.25 to $7.70 per barrel and Brown (1987) with a range of $8.50 to $11.10 per barrel (all converted to 1993 dollars). All are obviously well below market prices since 1973. That the OPEC cartel has exercised and can exercise monopoly power in world oil markets by cooperating to curtail production is widely accepted (see, for example, Adelman, 1990b; Jones, 1990; Griffin, 1992; MacFadyen, 1993; Griffin and Vielhaber, 1994). Those who argue that OPEC has not been effective in using its potential monopoly power in the past (Bohi and Toman, 1993) have overlooked the fact that prolonged higher prices are inevitably followed by the waning of monopoly influence with the loss of market share (Wirl, 1985; Greene, 1991; Suranovic, 1994). However, at lower prices, lost market share is recaptured in time, and monopoly influence is restored. Basic economic theory applied to the history of world oil prices proves to be very enlightening about this process. In a static market, a monopolist maximizes profits by charging a price P that exceeds the cost of production C (including the normal return to capital) P=
C [1 + 1//3(P)]
(1)
where 13(P) is the price elasticity of demand. For a cartel controlling a large share of a market, the
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al Oil prices and core O P E C m a r k e t share historical and projected
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Figure 3
Oil prices and core OPEC market share, historical and projected: 1995 AEO
profit-maximizing price depends on two other factors: (1) its market share (0
C 1 + { I//3(P) s [/~(P) + 111
(2)
If the rest of the world (ROW) can meet OPEC's supply reductions barrel for barrel, at the same price, the cartel has no monopoly influence over prices. Supply responsiveness is a direct function of the price elasticity of supply, as one would expect (Greene, 1991, p. 126). l° Similarly, as market share approaches zero, P converges to C. The large difference between short-run and long-run oil market price elasticities implies that a cartel can force prices much higher in the short run than can be maintained in the long run (Greene, 1991; MacFadyen, 1993). Thus small supply shortfalls of the order of 10% or less can create enormous price shocks in the short run, but such price levels cannot be maintained in the long run without a continuing sacrifice of market share. However, as a cartel gives up market share, it gives up the ability to maintain high prices, as Equation 2 shows. Ultimately prices must fall to long-run monopoly levels (or somewhat higher in a growing market). This pattern is clearly evident in the history of oil prices and OPEC market share. In Figure 3, oil price is plotted against the market share of the OPEC core nations: Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Iraq, Iran, U.A.E. and Libya. Years are identified by their last two digits. Two curves representing the long-run (lower curve) and short-run (upper curve) profitmaximizing price as functions of the core O P E C nations' share of the world market are also plotted. The curves were drawn using the same short- and long-run elasticity values as
mlf the ROW supply elasticity is c~, then ~(P) = [(c,//3)(l -s)]/[ l - (~d/3)(1 -s)]
59
used in the simulation model below. ~j The 1972 world oil price (which is close to the estimated competitive market prices cited above) is assumed to be the competitive price (C) for all years. Prior to 1974, oil prices were below even the long-run monopoly price curve. The price shock of the last quarter of 1973 and 1974 raised prices above the long-run curve, but well below OPEC's short-run profit-maximizing price. In a growing world market, prices just above the long-run curve can be maintained indefinitely at a constant market share. This appears to be what was happening from 1974 to 1978. In 1979 and 1980, spurred by the oil supply disruptions due to the Iran-lraq War, prices rocketed towards short-run profit-maximizing levels. Sustaining these price levels in 1981, 1982 and 1983 cost OPEC dearly in market share. With profits and market share continuing to dwindle in 19841985, the OPEC resolve cracked. In 1986, when Saudi Arabia expanded production, prices fell to approximately the longrun monopoly price level. Today, growing economies readjusting to lower oil prices are buying more OPEC oil. In Figure 3, D O E forecasts of OPEC market share in 2000, 2005 and 2010 illustrate the expected trend of increasing OPEC market share (US Department of Energy, 1996d). Studies by Wirl (1990) and Suranovic (1993)(1994) have shown that a pricing policy of brief price shocks of a year or so in duration, separated by periods of lower prices, may well be a profit-maximizing strategy for OPEC. This is bad news for consuming nations because, between 2000 and 2005, OPEC should have regained all the market share it gave up defending high oil prices during the 1980s. Of course, this does not prove that price shocks will occur; it merely establishes motive and opportunity. LaCasse and Plourde (1995) distinguish two potential causes of future oil supply disruptions: (1) political and institutional factors which lead to 'random shocks', and (2) the wilful exercise of monopoly power which produces what they call 'strategic shocks' Of course, a hybrid of the two is possible as well and, should a random shock occur, it will probably be in OPEC's economic interest to draw it out for a year or two. Because the 'market failure' in the world oil market results from imperfect competition due to the market power of the OPEC cartel, it is incorrect to characterize oil dependence costs as 'externalities', as some have done (Bohi and Toman, 1996). Although some aspects of the problem can be viewed as analogous to external costs, defining the oil dependence problem in terms of external costs leads one to search in the wrong direction for solutions: towards taxes that might 'internalize' the supposed external costs. While Pigouvian taxes can produce an efficient market outcome in response to external costs, they are not a cure-all for monopoly power.
J~Because short-run elasticities are so small, curves cannot be drawn based on the assumption of constant elasticities. Elasticities must be an increasing (in absolute value) function of oil price. We assume linear supply and demand equations, which satisfy this requirement, and the same parameters as in Table 1. Note that the cartel cannot move directly upwards (vertically) in this diagram, raising prices and holding market share constant. To raise prices, it must sacrifice market share, ie it must move diagonally, as it did from 1979 to 1980.
60
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
Impacts of monopoly behavior on the US economy The cost to the US economy of the non-competitive pricing of oil has been enormous in the past and could be substantial in the future. The US Department of Energy (1988) (p. 6) estimated the lost economic growth from the two oil shocks of the 1970s at $1.2 trillion (apparently estimated in 1987 or 1988 dollars). Considering the entire 1972-1991 period, and counting all types of economic losses, including transfer of wealth, Greene and Leiby (1993) put the toll at over $4 trillion (1993 dollars). This is about 80% of the total US expenditure on national defense and twice the interest payments on the national debt over the same period. A sudden increase in the price of oil creates three separate and additive types of economic loss to the US economy: (1) loss of the potential to produce; (2) macroeconomic adjustment losses; (3) transfer of wealth from US oil consumers to foreign oil exporters (difference between monopoly and competitive prices). When oil prices rise, the economy is able to produce less output with the same resources of capital, labor, materials and land. The loss of potential output or gross national product (GNP) is equal to the net losses of consumer and producer surplus that occur throughout the economy. The implications for the economy's long-run potential to produce have been described by Tatom (1993) and many others (eg Pindyck, 1980; Burgess, 1984; Pakravan, 1984). The shortrun inelasticity of oil demand and supply suggests that factor input ratios will change little at first and that factor substitution will increase over time. When prices rise rapidly, additional transitory costs result because wages and prices are not able to adjust sufficiently rapidly to the new oil price regime to permit the economy to operate at full employment. Macroeconomic adjustment losses add to the loss of productive capacity that would be inescapable even were the economy at full employment. The adjustment mechanism for these losses is entirely different from that for loss of potential G N P and should be much more rapid (Tatom, 1993, p. 132). For example, Uri (1996) found that crude oil price increases during the 1947-1994 period raised unemployment rates in the US for at least 3 years. Recent research has begun to improve our understanding of the aggregate relationship between oil price shocks and macroeconomic losses (Hamilton, 1996a, 1996b; Hooker, 1996a, 1996b) and has helped to identify at least some of the microeconomic mechanisms that convert oil price shocks into more extensive and pervasive macroeconomic losses (Davis et al, 1996; Hooker, 1996c; Davis and Haltiwanger, 1997). When prices are increased by monopoly behavior, there is also a transfer of wealth from US oil consumers to the owners of foreign oil. This 'loss' is a transfer payment. The wealth still exists; ownership is simply transferred from US citizens to foreign oil producers. A similar transfer of wealth also takes place within the US from oil consumers to own-
ers of US oil resources. Since this is internal to the US, it cannot be counted as a loss to the national economy. 12 The transfer of wealth is exactly equal to the quantity of oil the US imports times the difference between the monopoly price and the competitive market price of oil. Because they overlooked the transfer of wealth as a true cost to the national economy, LaCasse and Plourde (1995) (p. 13) incorrectly concluded that import reliance is not an important concern of energy policy. All three effects have been recognized by economists for some time. Pindyck (1980) (p. 19) estimated a 0.25% loss of US potential G N P for a 10% increase in the price of oil, based on 'back-of-the-envelope'calculations, and also asserted that the indirect or macroeconomic adjustment effects would be of roughly equal magnitude. Mork and Hall (1980a)(1980b) statistically estimated that, in response to the 70% increase in energy prices in 1974 and the additional 30% increase in 1975, US G N P fell by 2.5'V,, in 1974, about 5"/0 in 1975 and 4.5% in 1976. Findings by Mork and Hall (1980b) for the 1979-1980 price shock were similar: a 1% decrease in G N P in 1979 and a 4"/0 decrease in 1980. Hamilton (1983)(1985) investigated the historical relationship between oil price shocks and G N P and concluded that, '...we must give causal interpretation to the correlation between oil prices and output' (Hamilton, 1985, p. 115). More recently, Moosa (1993) concluded that the relationship of oil price to output declines satisfied statistical tests of causality, and Lee et al (1995) found that price shock impacts on G N P were greater when oil prices had been stable recently than when recent price movements had been frequent and erratic. They also found that price increases reduced GNP, but that price decreases did not have a statistically significant effect. In part, they attributed this to the positive potential G N P effects being counterbalanced by negative macroeconomic adjustment costs during downward price shocks. Hickman (1987) used 14 major macroeconomic models to estimate the impact of a 50'¼, oil price shock, occurring in 1984, on US GNP. He found short-run responses ranging from -0.010 to -0.047, with an average of -0.028. This would imply an average elasticity of twice that amount, or -0.056, very much in line with the statistical evidence. Using a small model of the world oil market, Helkie (1991) simulated the impacts of past price disruptions and concluded that an estimate of the elasticity of G N P with respect to oil price of about -0.03 replicated past events well. Recently, Mork et al (1994) estimated macroeconomic responses to oil price increases in seven OECD countries from 1967 to 1992. They found an elasticity of US G N P with respect to the price of oil of about -0.05 to -0.07, essentially the same as studies using only data from earlier oil price shocks. Tatom (1993) examined the question of whether the impact on the US economy of the brief doubling of world oil prices from July to October 1990 was disproportionately smaller than previous shocks. He concluded
IZNonetheless, it is likely to be perceived as a social problem, as the Windfall Profits Tax on oil imposed during the 1970sattests.
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
that the US economy appeared to be as vulnerable to oil price shocks as ever. The transfer of wealth is not included in the loss of output (GNP) measured by these studies, as explained by Greene and Leiby (1993) and Huntington and Eschbach (1987) (pp. 199-200), and described by Hogan and Broadman (1988) (p. 65), Mork et a/(1994) (p. 20) and many others. The reason is that measured GNP is adjusted for changes in the price of imports. As a result: 'Even if total US output remains unaltered by the oil shock, the US economy would still be worse off due to the reduction in the purchasing power of its domestic income' (Huntington and Eschbach, 1987, p. 202). We define the transfer of wealth to be a cost of oil dependence only in so far as it derives from the exercise of monopoly power by oil producers. If there were no monopoly behavior in world oil markets, there would still be some transfer of wealth to oil producers in the form of producer surplus. However, this would not be counted as a cost of oil dependence to the US because the competitive market solution yields the maximum economic benefits. Thus, in estimating the transfer of wealth cost in the monopolized oil market, only the cost over and above a competitive market price is counted.
The future oil problem With the exception of OPEC's market share and the growth rate of demand, the basic determinants of world oil market vulnerability to monopoly behavior have changed little since 1973. Oil demand and supply remain price inelastic (Gately, 1995, p. 2). Although there is reason to believe that recent advances in oil supply technologies (eg three-dimensional (3-d) seismic imaging, horizontal drilling, etc.; see, for example, Salameh, 1995; Streifel, 1995) have increased the elasticity of supply to some degree, the effect on world price elasticities of oil supply has yet to be quantified. On the other hand, there is reason to suspect that demand may be less elastic. Since the first oil price shock, the only growth in world oil demand has been in the transport sectors of developed economies and in all sectors of developing economies, precisely the areas in which oil demand has historically been most inelastic. From 1971 to 1990, oil use outside OECD countries grew at the rate of 3.6% per year. Transportation oil use in OECD countries increased by 2.2% per year, but oil use in other sectors of OECD economies declined overall by more than 20% (International Energy Agency, 1992). The sensitivity of the economy to oil and energy price shocks is related to the cost shares of oil and energy in G N P (Tatom, 1993, p. 134). Intuitively, the more one spends on oil, the more a proportional increase in its price will reduce output. Although the economy's dependence on energy and oil since 1981 has been significantly reduced, it is now about the same as it was at the time of the first oil price shock. In 1973, the net cost of oil to the US amounted to 1.9% of GDR In 1992, oil's cost share was 1.8%, and it stood at about 1.8% in 1996 (Figure 4). Energy costs amounted to
61
Energy and oil costs as shares of U.S. GDP 12 1
~, 6~
/-
0 I-
"-\
/-_-~"
4~
1970
I
1975
~ I
1980
--Energy Figure 4
I
1985
1990
-
19'95
---Oil
Energy and oil costs as shares of US GDP
8.1"/,, of GDP in 1973 and 7.5% in 1993. To be sure, energy and oil costs rose during the late 1970s and early 1980s with the price of oil. They will rise again with future oil price increases. The important point is that oil's importance to our economy is about the same as it was 20 years ago, before the Arab OPEC oil embargo of 1973-1974. The transfer of wealth from US consumers to foreign owners of oil depends directly on the level of US imports. Current levels of US oil imports (46.2'7,, or 8.4 MMBD) are higher than those preceding the first oil price shock in 19731974 and almost equal to the highest level on record (46.5% or 8.6 MMBD) in 1977. US oil imports have been rising since 1982 and are expected to continue to rise in the future (Figure 5). The US Department of Energy (1996d) (table CI 1) predicts that US imports will increase from their current level of 46% of US consumption into the range 52% 65% by 2005, and to 5Y'/,~-67% by 2010. Greene and Leiby (1993) put the transfer of US wealth due to monopolistic oil pricing from 1972-1991 at over $1 trillion. A given OPEC price increase in the future will almost surely cause a greater loss of US wealth than in the past because the US will be importing more oil. Transportation is at the center of the US oil dependence problem, because it is by far the dominant consumer of petroleum products, accounting for two-thirds of US oil use. Its demand for oil is also highly inelastic (Dargay and Gately, 1994). In terms of the light products that drive the petroleum market, transportation's share is more than three-quarters. While other sectors have shown some ability to sm~stitute other energy sources for oil over the past 20 years, transportation has not (Figure 6). Impacts o f a 2-year oil shock on the US econono,." a simulation
We demonstrate the likely impact of a future oil price shock on the US economy with a simple model of world oil supply and demand (see Appendix A for details). World oil demand is represented for two regions: the US and ROW (including OPEC). World oil supply is represented for three regions: OPEC, US and ROW (excluding OPEC). OPEC supply is exogenous, while the model solves simultaneously for US and ROW supply and demand.
62
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al U.S. Net oil imports
10000~ "<~ 8000[-e~
6000-
~ 4 0 0 0 f ~ ~ ~
I
~" 2000 0
1960
1970
1980 •
1990
1995
Total net imports [ ] OPEC
Figure 5 US net oil imports 35
Use of petroleum by sector, 1973-1996
30 25 20 ~ 15 10 5 0
R&C '73
R&C '96
lnd '73
Ind '96
Elec '73
] 11
Elec '96
Trans'73
Trans'96
• Petroleum []Other
Figure 6 Use of petroleum by sector: 1973-1994
Both supply and demand equations are assumed to be linear, implying that elasticities will increase linearly with the price of oil. The elasticities for the base case simulation model are shown in Table 1 as a function of world oil price) 3 A simple lagged adjustment specification, with an adjustment parameter of 0.1, is used to represent short- and longrun adaptation to price changes. Thus long-run elasticities are ten times as large as short-run elasticities. We do not include an explicit G N P feedback effect on oil prices such as that used by Gately (1995). Such an effect, however, is 'simulated' by the linear demand equation, in which the elasticity increases linearly with the price of oil. 14 The US Department of Energy (1995a) Annual Energy Outlook 1995 (AEO) reference case provides a 'base case' forecast.~5 Year-specific intercept terms are calibrated for the
~3These values are consistent with the review of Huntington (1991) and the assessment of OPEC pricing strategies by Gately (1995). 14In a constant-elasticity oil demand model, the GNP feedback effect causes the price elasticity of demand to increase approximately linearly with the price of oil (see Appendix A). tSSince this simulation was performed, the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) has produced two additional AEOs with increasingly optimistic projections about non-OPEC oil supply. Use of a more recent reference case would reduce the costs to the US and benefits to OPEC somewhat, but would not change the fundamental conclusions of our simulation in any significant way.
supply and demand equations to match exactly the EIA reference case projections. A price shock scenario is produced by reducing OPEC supply and using the model to compute a new market solution for each year for US and ROW oil supply and demand, given the constant terms from the reference case and the price-slope coefficients implied by the elasticities in Table 1. The cost of monopoly oil pricing to the US economy is then estimated using techniques similar to those developed by Greene and Leiby (1993). Potential G N P losses are estimated by the changes in consumer and producer surplus, measured as the appropriate areas under the linear supply and (uncompensated) demand curves. The transfer of wealth is simply the estimated quantity of imports times the difference between actual prices and the assumed competitive market price. Macroeconomic adjustment costs are simulated using an elasticity of GNP with respect to oil price, which is proportional to the oil cost share of GNP. It is assumed that the economy adjusts to oil price changes so that impacts change dynamically over time. These methods are described in greater detail in Appendix B. Whether or when a future oil price shock will occur depends on the desire and ability of OPEC nations to cooperate to restrict production. In addition, temporary price shocks can occur even without monopoly behavior if supplies are
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al Table 1
Simulation model short-run elasticities
World oil price (1993 $/bbl)
20 35 50
63
Demand
Supply
US and ROW
US
ROW
-0.037 -0.068 -0.099
0.028 0.048 0.067
0.023 0.032 0.056
significantly disrupted by an act of war or nature. We make no pretense about being able to predict the timing, size or reason for a future price shock. Instead, we assume a significant supply reduction by OPEC and calculate the effect on world oil prices, the US economy and OPEC revenues. The US Department of Energy (1995a) A E O reference case projections call for oil prices to increase from $16.12/bbl in 1993 to $19.13 in 2000, $21.50 in 2005 and $24.12 in 2010.16 World oil demand grows at the modest rate of 1.7'2'0 per year, from 66.18 M M B D in 1993 to 88.32 M M B D by 2010. US demand is expected to grow at a much slower pace, 0.7% per year through 2010. US oil supply declines from 9.53 M M B D in 1993 to a low of 8.22 in 2005, but then begins to increase to 8.58 M M B D in 2010 as oil prices increase. The ROW oil supply increases gradually from 29.63 M M B D in 1993 to 33.07 M M B D in 2010, an average annual rate of 0.6%. OPEC's output grows from 26.2 to 46.7 MMBD, an average annual rate of 3.3'7,, (US Department of Energy, 1995a, table A.20). ~7 We use the 1994 InternationalEnergy Outlook (US Department of Energy, 1994b, table 3) production projections for China, the former Soviet Union and Eastern Europe through 2010. These project that oil output in China will grow from 2.84 M M B D in 1992 to 3.4 M M B D in 2010, an average growth rate of 1%, and that of the former Soviet Union plus Eastern European countries will increase from 9.16 M M BD in 1992 to 11.4 M M B D in 2010, an average rate of 1.2%. Starting with 1993 production estimates, we trend production levels to reach the combined total of 14.8 M M B D by 2010. Js With oil prices near the long-run monopoly price level and growing world demand, OPEC's share of the world oil market increases continuously throughout the base case forecast. OPEC's base case share of the total world market grows from 41'2'o in 1993 to 46'7`, by 2000, 51% in 2005 and reaches 53% by 2010. With growing volume and rising prices, OPEC revenues increase from $160 billion in 1993 to $410
~6'Oi1' production here includes crude oil, natural gas plant liquids, other hydrogenand hydrocarbons for refineryfeedstocks,alcohols,liquids from coal and other sources and refinery gains. ~VThisis quite close to what Gately (1995) characterized as a 'robustly optimal strategy' for OPEC. He concluded that OPEC should expand its output at approximately the rate of world economic growth. World GDP is assumed to grow at 3.1% per year in the reference case (US Department of Energy, 1994b, table 1). ~SGriffin and Vielhaber (1994) propose an 'aggressive non-OPEC supply scenario', the 'key assumption' of which is that production by tbrmer Soviet republics and China will increase to 19.2 MMBD by 2010. This implies a 3.5% per year rate of production growth for these countries.
billion in the base case by 2010. OPEC grosses a total of $5.0 trillion (1993 dollars) over the forecast period with a present value (PV) of $3.8 trillion discounted at 3'7`,per year. Others are more optimistic about the future expansion of ROW oil production. Streifel (1995), for example, projects that oil production outside OPEC and the O E C D will grow at 1.9% per year, resulting in an OPEC market share of only 46% by 2010. The more recent 1997 A E O (US Department of Energy, 1996d, table A21) projects OPEC's market share at 43%, 49% and 54'7`, for 2000, 2005 and 2010 respectively. Such differences will have little effect on the basic conclusions of this simulation. The price shock scenario assumes that the total OPEC oil supply in the year 2005 is reduced by 4.2 M M B D (10%) from the previous year, or 13%less than they would have produced in 2005 in the reference case. In the following year, it is assumed that they further reduce supply by an additional 2.8 MMBD, 17'7,, below the 2004 level, or 21'7,, below the reference case projection for 2006. This supply reduction is approximately the same size as those of 1973-1974 and 1979-1980. OPEC is then assumed to begin very gradually to increase production by about 0.7 M M B D per year until, in 2010, the supply reduction is 20.4'7`, versus the base case. This pattern was deliberately chosen to produce almost exactly the same revenues for OPEC in the years 2007-2010 as OPEC would have received in the reference case, thereby reducing the significance of revenue gains or losses in years beyond the 1995 A E O forecast horizon of 2010. Table 2 presents the results of six scenarios. The numbers shown in a given row are totals for that scenario; changes from the base case can be obtained by subtracting the base case total from the appropriate scenario total. Two scenarios explore the effect of using strategic oil stocks on the sustained supply curtailment. Two others assess the impact of doubling world price elasticities of supply and demand. Although the strategic petroleum reserve (SPR) can be effective against a short-lived, random shock, it is relatively ineffectual against a strategic shock of 2 years or more. Increasing the price responsiveness of oil supply and demand, on the other hand, appears to be a very effective strategy.
A 2-yearprice shock in 2005 As a result of the OPEC cutback, oil prices more than double, from $21/bbl in 2004 to $54/bbl in 2005. Despite a further reduction in OPEC supply of 7% in 2006, the price of oil declines to $46/bbl as world supply and demand adjust and OPEC's market share falls. Responding to the higher prices, world oil supply increases in 2005 by 1.5 M M B D and
64
The outlook for US oil dependence." D L Greene et al
Table 2
OPEC revenues and US economic impacts under alternative scenarios (billion 1993 $, PV in 1993)
Scenario
US GNP impacts Wealth transfer
Potential GNP loss
Macroeconomic adjustment costs
Total
1993-2010
2005-2010 (PV in 2005)
520 670 650
130 200 200
70 270 270
720 1140 1120
2840 3330 3320
1870 2560 2530
640 150
190 60
230 60
1060 270
3310 1520
2520 720
240
80
150
470
1800
1100
Base case Price shock Strategic petroleum reserve Double SPR, 2 years Double world elasticities 2xWorld+price shock
world demand is 4 M M B D lower than the base case scenario. US supply is 0.4 M M B D higher in 2005 and 0.7 M M B D higher in 2006. In comparison with the base case, US demand is 1 M M B D lower in 2005 and 1.7 M M B D lower in 2006. Although prices drop to about $3 above the level of the base case in 2007, supply increases and demand reductions persist after the price shock due to the dynamic adjustment structure of the simulation model. World supply remains 2 M M B D above the base case, and demand continues to be almost 6 M M B D below it. OPEC's market share falls from 50% in 2004 to 44% in 2006. From there, it begins to recover as the cutback is trimmed (Figure 7). The effect on OPEC revenues is substantial. In 1993 dollars discounted at 3"/,, to PV in 2005, the supply shock and subsequent strategy net OPEC an additional $700 billion in gross revenues (Table 2). This is a one-third increase over the reference case revenues for the 2005 to 2010 time period. Whether $700 billion over 5 years is sufficient incentive to induce OPEC members to cooperate on a supply strategy is an interesting question, but is beyond the scope of this paper.
Impact of releases from strategic reserves The use of SPR is simulated by assuming a maximum drawdown in the first year of the shock. The US SPR presently contains just under 600 million barrels of oil. If all were used over the period of a year, the average production rate would
80 _
Oil price v. O P E C m a r k e t share scenario: s u p p l y s h o c k in 2005-2006
60
2005
d~ e~ 40
~' 2o 0 0.40
I
I
t
I
I
0.42
0.44
0.46
0.48
0.50
be 1.64 MMBD. The use of SPR is simulated by adding this to world supply for 2005 before recomputing the market equilibrium price. It is assumed that OPEC will not change its planned pattern of cutbacks in response to the SPR release. The SPR release causes the oil price in 2005 to fall by almost $10/bbl versus the scenario without SPR. 19 Thus SPR mitigates the price shock of 2005 and, if the supply cutback had ended that year, SPR would have produced enormous economic benefit. However, in 2006, there is no more SPR and, by assumption, OPEC goes ahead with its originally planned cutback. Because prices were lower and supplies more plentiful in 2005 with the SPR release than without it, world economies adjusted less than in the price shock scenario. As a result, the supply reduction in 2006 causes a larger price shock than it would have had SPR not been used. Instead of $46/bbl, 2006 prices after the SPR release jump to $55/bbl. After 2006, they are identical to the no-SPR scenario. In effect, the sequence of prices is reversed. As a result, OPEC revenues and profits are little changed. Estimated gross revenues for the 2005-2010 period are about 1% lower. SPR seems to have little effect against a persistent OPEC strategy to restrain production. On the other hand, during the first year, it had a clear impact and might have a discouraging effect on a cartel struggling to maintain consensus and discipline. Petroleum stocks held by O E C D countries increased from 2588 million barrels in 1973 to 3588 million barrels in 1996, a net gain of 1 billion barrels. Nearly all of the change is accounted for by increased reserves held by the US and Japan in strategic reserves (US Department of Energy, 1997a, tables 4.5 and 1.6). If all of this additional reserve were released in the first year of the shock, it would raise supply by an average of 2.95 MMBD. We assume that half of the O E C D reserves are sold in 2005, the other half in 2006. The effect is also disappointing. The price of oil stays at $44/bbl in 2005 and $45/bbl in 2006, but then jumps to $37/bbl in 2007 from $29/bbl without the additional reserve. Again,
I 0.52
OPEC Market share 7 Oil price versus OPEC market share; scenario: supply shock in 2005-2006 Figure
OPEC revenues
~gThisresult is comparable with simulations of the use of SPR published by the EIA (US Department of Energy, 1994b, p. 22). They found that, for an 8-MMBD, 9-month supply shortfall, use of the SPR reduced world oil prices by $6 $10 per barrel (1994 dollars).
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al OPEC revenues and US losses are little changed. The implication is that the use of strategic reserves in this way against a determined, strategic multi-year supply reduction is neither an effective deterrent nor an effective protection for the economy. 20 These discouraging results parallel the conclusions of an earlier analysis by Suranovic (1994), who found that reserves of the order of 30 billion barrels would be necessary to defeat a strategy of determined supply curtailment. Economic impacts on the US Regardless of the assumed use of SPR, the 2-year supply curtailment costs the US economy around half a trillion dollars PV over the reference case. Total losses to the US economy in the price shock scenario amount to $ l. 1 trillion (1993 dollars) PV (Table 2). The PV in 1993 of the estimated transfer of wealth through 2010 in the base case amounts to $520 billion. The single price shock in 2005-2006 increases this to $670 billion PV. In 2005 alone, $120 billion PV (versus $35 billion in the base case) is lost via wealth transfer. Half of this goes to OPEC and half to other world exporters. In the base case, prices increase gradually, but the method used here will always calculate some potential output losses as long as oil prices remain above the assumed competitive market level of $10/bbl. In the base case, estimated potential G N P losses amount to $130 billion PV and macroeconomic adjustment losses total $70 billion PV. In the price shock scenario, the estimated potential G N P losses rise to $200 billion PV and the macroeconomic adjustment losses total $270 billion PV. Increasing price elasticities Given the dependence of OPEC market power on supply and demand elasticities, a logical strategy would be to enhance the ability of oil supply and demand to respond to higher oil prices. Increasing the short- and long-run price elasticities of supply and demand would reduce the impact of the price shock caused by a given supply shortfall, thereby cutting OPEC revenues and reducing the impact on the US economy. Improving price responsiveness should therefore act simultaneously to deter OPEC from initiating a supply cutback and to protect the US economy should one occur. Three key factors determine the price elasticities of oil supply and demand: (1) the preferences of consumers; (2) the technology of energy use in production and consumption; (3) the technology of energy, especially oil, supply. The last two are susceptible to dramatic changes as a result of technological advances. Indeed, some believe that advances in oil development technology have already increased the elasticity of ROW oil supply (Streifel, 1995, p. 4).
2°Of course, in a simulation such as this, the model's equations determine the results. We note, for example, that the value of an SPR would probably be greater if constant-elasticity supply and demand equations were used instead of linear equations in which elasticities increase with increasing price. The size of the price shock would also be greater, however.
65
Doubling price elasticities implies that the elasticity of demand at $28lbbl would increase from -0.053 to -0.106. The elasticities of supply at the same price for the US would increase from 0.038 to 0.076. 2~ The increase in elasticities is assumed to begin in 1996 and increase linearly over a decade until a doubling is achieved in 2005. As a result, prices and oil quantities change for all years after 1995, not only those in which supply shortages occur. Unlike the effect of strategic reserves, the effect of substantially increasing the price responsiveness of the market is dramatic. Doubling the elasticities of supply and demand by 2005 for the entire world cuts post-2005 OPEC revenues by more than half, whether or not a price shock occurs. If there is no price shock, US economic losses with doubled price elasticities are estimated to be $270 billion PV versus $720 billion in the reference case. In the price shock case, US economic losses with doubled elasticities are reduced by $670 billion PV. The price responsiveness of oil supply outside OPEC is an important factor in mitigating the impact of the oil supply reduction. This contradicts the assertion of LaCasse and Plourde (1995) (p. 20) that supply-side measures are only useful in the case of short-lived, random price shocks and that only demand-side policies can be effective against longer term, economically motivated price shocks. Both matter. Thus the discovery of better, cheaper means of finding, developing and producing oil is an important part of energy policy.
Conclusions The US oil dependence problem is not one of running out of oil. It is a combined result of the short-run inelasticity of oil supply and demand, the potential use of monopoly power in world oil markets by a few nations that hold the majority of the world's oil resources, reliance on imports and the importance of oil to the US economy. In the past, members of the OPEC cartel have created or capitalized on disruptions in the world oil market, reaping hundreds of billions of dollars in monopoly rents from oil-consuming countries. During the past decade, however, the cartel has been less effective. This has led some to conclude that conditions in the world oil market have materially changed and that oil dependence no longer poses the threat it once did (Bohi and Toman, 1993, 1996; Lichtblau, 1994). The bulk of the evidence points to the opposite conclusion, it appears that the only major, objective factor that has changed significantly is the market share of the OPEC cartel, a key determinant of OPEC's power in world oil markets. The growth rate of world oil demand is also slower, and there is some encouraging evidence that the price elasticity of ROW oil supply may
2~Of course, this exercise also makes it clear that accurate short-run price elasticity estimates are the most critical element of this analysis. While the estimates used here are consistent with those used by others and produce a pattern of market behavior consistent with past experience, there remains uncertainty both with respect to their values at particular prices and the rate at which they change as price increases.
66
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
have increased. The geographical concentration of world oil reserves and trends in world production and consumption indicate that the lost market share will be regained soon. This is supported by recent trends and is consistent with the best efforts to project the future. OPEC's share of the world oil market is expected to reach historic highs sometime between 2005 and 2010. The future values of elasticities of supply and demand, because they are usually inferred from historical data, are more difficult to assess. However, the most recent studies do not indicate that elasticities have increased significantly over previous levels (eg Dargay and Gately, 1994). In the US and other developed economies, the concentration of oil use in the transportation sector, as other more 'switchable' sectors have substituted other forms o f energy for oil, suggests that demand elasticity has not increased. Oil's cost share of US GNP, the key indicator of the impact an oil price shock will have on the US economy, is about the same as it was before the first oil price shock in 1973. Today, US oil imports are within 1% o f their highest level ever, and climbing. OPEC's resolve is more difficult to evaluate, especially for a period 10 years in the future. The simulations presented here, however, suggest that there will be at least opportunity and motive for collusion. The SPR does not appear to provide an effective defense against a sustained supply curtailment. For a multi-year episode, the effect of the SPR is to postpone the full impact of a sustained cutback in production, to reduce its benefit to OPEC by something like 5°/'oand to mitigate its impact on the US economy by a similar amount. If OPEC is determined to cut production, it can apparently shrug off the SPR releases and then reap the benefits of higher oil prices. Although the SPR could be very effective against a smaller, shorter supply interruption, against a large multi-year supply restriction it appears to offer neither a major disincentive to OPEC nor significant protection to the US economy. Both the benefit to OPEC and the cost to the US of a sustained oil price increase, however, are quite sensitive to the short- and long-run price elasticities of petroleum demand and supply. If world price elasticities of supply and demand could be doubled by dramatic advances in energy technology, the estimated value of a 2-year oil price shock to OPEC would be significantly reduced. The estimated cost to the US economy of oil dependence would be cut by almost one-half, saving hundreds of billions of dollars. Even in the base case, OPEC revenues after 2005 would be cut by half, and US economic costs reduced by two-thirds. Transportation accounts for two-thirds o f petroleum use and 80% o f high-valued light product use in the US, since transportation is 97',/o dependent on oil. Increasing transportation's ability to substitute non-petroleum fuels by increasing the attractiveness o f alternative fuels and vehicles, improving vehicular and system operating efficiencies and, at the same time, advancing technologies for oil exploration, development and enhanced recovery could be the only effective strategy against the costs of oil dependence.
Acknowledgements The authors wish to thank Phil Patterson and Barry McNutt for their interest and support, and colleagues Jerry Hadder and Randy Curlee for their comments on earlier drafts. Any remaining errors are the responsibility of the authors. The views in this paper are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of Oak Ridge National Laboratory or the US Department of Energy.
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Marshalla, R A, & Nesbitt, D M (1986). Future of world oil prices and production levels: an economic analysis. The Energy Journal, 7(1), 1-22. Masters, C D, Attanasi, E D, and Root, D H (1994) Worm Petroleum Assessment and Analysis US Geological Survey, National Center, Reston, Virginia Moosa, I A (1993). Can OPEC cause inflation and recession?. Energy PoHcy, 21(11), 1145-1154. Morison, M B (1987). The price of oil: lower and upper bounds. Energ), Policy, 15(5), 399407. Mork, K A, & Hall, R E (1980). Energy prices, inflation and recession 1974-1975. The Energy Journal, 1(3), 31-63. Mork, K A, & Hall, R E (1980). Energy prices and the U.S. economy in 1979-1981. The Energy Journal, 1(2), 41-51. Mork, K A, Olsen, O, & Mysen, H T (I 994). Macroeconomic responses to oil price increases and decreases in seven OECD countries. The Energy Journal, 15(4), 19-35. OPEC Secretariat (1995) 'The role of OPEC into the next century: upstream and downstream activities' presented at the World Energy Council 16th Congress, Tokyo, October Pakravan, K (1984) Oil Supply Disruptions in the 1980s Hoover Institution Press, Stantbrd University, Stanford, Calilbrnia Pindyck, R S (1980). Energy price increases and macroeconomic policy. The Energy Journal, 1(4), 1-20. Salameh, M G (1995) 'Can technology provide the answer to future oil crises?' OPEC Review Winter 19(4), 293 305 Stiglitz, J E (1976). Monopoly and the rate of extraction of exhaustible resources. The American Economic' Review, 66(4), 655-661. Streifel, S S (1995) Reviewand Outlookfor the WorldOil Market Discussion Paper 301, The World Bank, Washington DC Suranovic, S M (1993) 'Does a target-capacity utilization rule fulfill OPEC's economic objectives?' Energy Economics 15 (2) 71-79 Suranovic, S M (1994). Import policy effects on the optimal oil price. The Energy Journal, 15(3), 123-144. Tatom, J A (1993) 'Are there useful lessons from the 1990-91 oil price shock?' The Energy Journal 14 (4) 129 150 Uri, N D (1996). Crude oil price volatility and unemployment in the United States. Energy, 21(1), 29-38. US Department of Energy (1988) United States Energy Policy 19801988 DOE/S-0068, Washington DC, October US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (1994b) International Energy Outlook 1994 DOE/EIA-0484(94), Washington DC US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (1995a) Annual Energy Outlook 1995 DOE/EIA-0383(95), Washington DC~ January US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (1996b) Oil Production Capacity Expansion CostsJor the Persian Oulf DOEI EIA-TR/0606, Washington DC, February US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (t 996c) International Energy Annual 1995 DOE/EIA-0219(95), Washington DC US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (1996d) Annual Energy Outlook 1997 DOE/EIA-0383(97), Washington DC, December US Department of Energy, Energy Inlbrmation Administration (1997a) International Petroleum Statistics Report DOE/EIA-0520(97/04), Washington DC, March US Geological Survey (1995) 1995 NationalAssessment of United States Oiland Gas Resources U.S.GS. Circular 1118, US Government Printing Office, Washington DC Watkins, G C (1992). The Hotelling principle: autobahn or cul de sac?. The Energy Journal, 13(1), 124. Wirl, F (1985) 'Stable and volatile prices: an explanation by dynamic demand' in Feichtinger, G (ed) Optimal Control Theory and Economic Analysis 2 North-Holland, Amsterdam Wirl, F (1990). Dynamic demand and optimal OPEC pricing. Energy Economics, 12(3), 174-177.
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The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al
Appendix A Price elasticities of oil supply and demand The method for simulating oil supply impacts begins with an assumed state of the world oil market that is perturbed by a reduction in the supply of oil by OPEC countries. The world is divided into two demand regions, the US and ROW, and three supply regions, the US, OPEC and ROW. To create a price shock, OPEC supply is reduced exogenously. At this point, demand exceeds supply at the base case market price. Price equilibrates supply and demand to achieve a market balance. This model assumes that the change in demand dQ (or supply sQ) from period t-1 to period t is a fraction (3.) of the difference between the desired, or long-run, demand dqt (supply) that would prevail at the current price Pt and last year's demand (supply). Because the equations for supply and demand are structurally identical, the supply and demand subscripts are omitted below
Qt-Qt-i =h(qt-Qt- ~) qt=At+bPt
(AI)
The constant A t indicates factors other than price that determine demand (or supply) in year t, and b is the price slope of the supply or demand equation. Equation A 1can be solved for current demand (or supply) Qt as a function of price by substituting lbr q~
Q,=AAt+AbP,+(1-h.)O,_~
Values of 3. of the order of 0.1 are typical. There is also agreement that the shortrun price elasticities of supply and demand are quite small, of the order of +0.03 and -0.06 at $30/bbl respectively. Most values given in the literature are specified in terms of price elasticities rather than price slopes, and constant-elasticityformulations are common. In the linear dynamic adjustment model (Equation A2), the short-run and long-run price elasticities (13)depend on the price and the quantity consumed as follows
P,
Pt
13sR:bA~ ; ~ L . = b ~
(A3)
An implication of Equation A3is that price elasticities will increase approximately linearly with oil price, simulating the feedback effect of oil price on GNP, and of GNP on oil demand. 22 Because supply elasticities will
22Ifone assumes constant elasticitiesof demand, the total elasticity of an oil price change, including its effect on GNP, is % =/30+/3¢r,,il where ~y is the elasticity of oil use with respect to GNP and %n is the elasticity of GNP with respect to the oil price. If we assume that aoi~ is proportional to the oil cost share of GNP, we have
(a2)
From Equation A2, it is clear that, for each of tour equations (supply and demand for both US and ROW), two parameters are required: b and 0<3.<1. The constants A t are calibrated to fit base case quantities and prices, giving b and 3..
't/p=~p+K( Q )P If QIYis approximately constant, even for large price changes, the GNP feedback effect causes the price elasticity to increase approximately linearly with price, as it would in a linear demand model.
also increase with oil price, the linear model will give a greater response to oil price than constant-elasticity models. Suranovic (1994) (p. 126), for example, used a model in which the price elasticity increased, but at a slower rate than if the oil demand equation were linear. In Suranovic's model, a doubling of the oil price from $24 to $48 (1990 dollars) would increase the price elasticity of demand by only about 30%. Thus linear equations will lead to smaller price increases and economic impacts. Given the short-run price elasticity estimates at 1993 prices and quantities, slope coefficients (b in Equation A3above) are calculated. Slopes are assumed to remain constant throughout the 1995 AEO forecast. For each lbrecast year and |br each supply and demand equation, a constant term (A, in Equation A2above) is computed. With the year-specific constant terms and the price slopes, we have demand and supply equations lbr each year. In some scenarios, we assume that price elasticities increase over the base ease levels. This is simulated by multiplying the initial elasticity estimates by a constant factor (eg two to double price elasticity) and recomputing new price slopes (using Equation A3) at the same initial price and quantities. The base case calendar year constant terms (A~) are not changed. It is assumed that price slopes begin to increase in 1996 and increase linearly to reach the new higher value in the year 2005, remaining constant thereafter. This is intended to reflect the fact that price elasticities cannot be changed immediately.
Appendix B Methods of estimating economic impacts Each of the three principal types of economic loss to the US economy is estimated. The loss of potential GNP is equal to producers' and consumers' surplus losses within the US economy in all markets affected
by the oil price increase. Because our simple model considers only oil, we directly estimate only surplus losses in the oil market. Greene and Leiby (1993) (lbotnote 18) show that this unambiguously underestimates the total surplus losses. Here, we multiply oil market
losses by 1.5, which approximates the ratio of total expenditures on petroleum plus natural gas to expenditures on petroleum. Given linear supply and demand curves, the estimation of surplus losses is straightlbrward. Let Pc and PM be the
The outlook for US oil dependence: D L Greene et al competitive and monopoly prices of oil respectively. The producers' surplus loss is
(0.5)(PM-Pc)[Qs(PM)-Qs(Pc)]
(BI)
The consumers' surplus loss is
(0.5)(PM-Pc)[Qo(Pc)-QD(PM) ]
(B2)
The problem of dynamic adjustment complicates the issue. Which supply and demand curves should be used, short-run or long-run, and which prices? We resolve this dilemma by measuring 'short-run' losses using the short-run supply and demand curves based on the difference between the current price and a hypothetical price, P,*, to which the economy is assumed to have already adjusted. Long-run losses are measured under the long-run curves, using the difference between the hypothetical adjusted price and the competitive market price. The calculation of the adjusted price is explained next. Macroeconomic adjustment losses occur due to the inability to maintain full employment of the lhctors of production throughout the adjustment to the new price regime. Although there have been numerous assessments of the impact of oil price changes on
the US economy, these studies generally do not distinguish between the two causes of loss of GNP. Pindyck (1980) suggests a 50/50 split. In the calculations done here, it is assumed that the macroeconomic adjustment elasticity is initially two-thirds of the oil cost share of G N E In terms of the size of the combined G N P impacts, all the estimates of which we are aware are of the same general magnitude as the oil cost share of G N E The earliest estimates by Mork and Hall (1980a) and Pindyck (1980) based on the 1973 1974 price shock were -0.03 and -0.02 respectively. In 1973, the oil cost share of GNP was 0.015, and in 1974 it jumped to 0.032. More recently, Mork et al (1994) estimated oil price elasticities [br US GNP of -0.054 and -0.068, depending on model tbrmulation, using data covering the period 1967-1992. Helkie ( 1991 ) cites an elasticity of GNP with respect to oil price of -0.03, based on simulations of the Federal Reserve Board staWs MCM model. In the case of both the potential GNP and macroeconomic adjustment losses, we may expect the economy to adjust over time to the higher price of oil, reducing its impact on GNP. In the lagged adjustment model, there exists a hypothetical price to which the economy has adjusted in any given year.
69
We compute GNP losses as a function of the difference between the actual market price and the hypothetical price. At any particular time t, the quantity demanded (supplied) will be the long-run equilibrium quantity lbr some price of oil, P,*. Substituting this price into Equation Aland assuming the equilibrium quantity q,= Q,, and then setting Equation A2cqual to the resulting expression, we obtain the lbllowing intuitive lbrmula lbr the hypothetical price
Pt*=AP,+(1-A)P' t
(B3)
For macroeconomic adjustment costs, the rate used is ~.=0.33, which implies nearcomplete adjustment within 3 years. For computing potential GNP losses, ~.=0. I. When oil prices rise due to the exercise of monopoly power by OPEC, there is also a transfer of wealth from US oil consumers to the owners of lbreign oil. This transfer equals US imports times the monopoly price minus the competitive price. In 1972, the year belbre the Arab OPEC oil embargo, the average cost of imported oil to US refiners, which had been declining lbr two decades, was $10.30/bbl in 1993 dollars. In this analysis, we assume a competitive market price of $10/bbl in 1993 dollars.