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June 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Oil and the Economy
Since it first bubbled from the ground
in Pennsylvania in 1859, oil has had a grip on the economy.
Since it was first formed in 1960, OPEC has had a grip on
oil prices. In this analysis, we consider whether oil and
OPEC still have the same hold on the economy.
We examine recent oil price movements
from a long-term perspective and assess the consequences for
economic activity. We show that current oil prices are moderate
by historical standards, and that substantial increases are
unlikely. OPEC continues to be a major factor in world oil
markets, affecting oil price volatility. U.S. economic activity
is still hurt by rising oil prices, but less than it was twenty
years ago. Similarly, regional economic activity is less sensitive
to oil price changes.
The World Oil Market
We first look at world oil markets
and the continuing role of OPEC. As is well known, oil prices
have been very volatile in recent years. OPEC has been a major
factor in the volatility of oil prices, with help from fluctuating
world demand.
Figure 1 shows that prices dropped
to a low of about $11 per barrel in the last week of 1998,
then climbed to a ten-year high of $34 in early March of this
year. The tripling of oil prices in the last 18 months came
about because of greater than anticipated demand and decreased
supply. Mexico, Norway, Russia and Oman agreed to output cuts
along with OPEC, putting considerable upward pressure on prices.
This price increase looks pretty similar to the 1979–81
price hike, which led to a severe recession.
When adjusted for inflation, however,
prices are about the same as they were in the early 1970s
and much lower than they were in the early '80s (Figure 2).
Prices almost tripled to near $10 in early 1974. In today's
dollars that is equivalent to $33 per barrel. The high of
$38 per barrel reached in 1982 would be $72 in today's dollars.
Similarly, for gasoline prices to reach the highs of the early
1980s, they'd have to average $2.55 per gallon nationally.
The current national average price is now about $1.50 per
gallon.
The U.S. is a mature oil basin. Our
production peaked in 1970 and has been declining since (see
Figure 3). In 1970 U.S. production was around 22 percent of
world output. Today we produce 12 percent of world oil output.
OPEC's share has also declined from the 55 percent of world
output in 1970. But it is still a hefty 40 percent today.
When Russia, Norway and Mexico decided to join OPEC in output
cuts last year, the output share of these countries summed
up to 60 percent of world output. This is shown by the shadowed
portion of the figure. (No wonder the oil price went up to
$34!)
Although we produce 12 percent of world
output, we consume 26 percent of it, hence we import nearly
55 percent of what we consume. As the economy grows and oil
production declines we should expect this number to rise.
A high import dependency is not necessarily a bad thing in
itself. Japan imports 100 percent of its oil. However, because
a major share of world oil production comes from politically
unstable parts of the world, there may be political and security
risks. World dependence on oil from OPEC and politically unstable
parts of the world will continue as Figure 4 illustrates.
The figure shows oil reserves in various areas of the world.
OPEC holds 65 percent of world oil reserves.
OPEC has now decided to keep the price
in a band which would correspond to $25 to $30 per barrel
for West Texas Intermediate crude oil. If prices go above
$30 for 20 days, they'll increase production, and lower production
if prices fall below $25. The band is shown in Figure 5. OPEC
has found that a price much higher than $30 is not sustainable
because it leads to an increase in non-OPEC supply and conservation.
A low price is bad for OPEC finances. It is estimated that
for each $1 drop in the price of oil, Saudi Arabia loses $2.5
billion dollars in annual revenue.
Oil Prices and U.S. Economic Activity
As we've illustrated, OPEC still
has a grip on the oil market and will remain a major factor
in oil price fluctuations. A considerable body of economic
research (including our own) suggests that oil price fluctuations
have figured prominently in national economic activity since
World War II. We now show that oil's influence on the economy
may be weakening.
Figure 6 shows oil prices and the nine
post–WWII recessions. The recessions are shown as gray
bars. Figure 7 highlights the oil price increases that are
not simply the reversal of declines that occurred during the
year before. As can be seen in the figure, rising oil prices
preceded eight of the nine post–WWII recessions. The
1960 recession is the one exception. Not much of a price hike
preceded the recession in 1970.
In the '50s and '60s, the economy was
so sensitive to oil prices that small oil-price increases
led recessions. Since the mid-1980s, we have seen a number
of instances in which rising oil prices did not lead to recessions.
Oil price fluctuations seem to have less of an effect on economic
activity today than in the past.
Rising oil prices can be indicative
of a classic supply-side shock. Rising oil prices signal increased
scarcity of energy which is a basic input to production. Consequently,
output and productivity growth slow. The decline in productivity
slows real wage growth and increases the unemployment rate
at which inflation accelerates. Under a monetary policy that
maintains a constant nominal GDP, the price level rises by
the amount GDP falls. If consumers expect the rise in oil
prices to be temporary, they will attempt to save less to
smooth out their consumption, which will boost the interest
rate.
Research shows a strong relationship
between oil prices and the unemployment rate. As shown in
Figure 8, rising oil prices led increases in the unemployment
rate in '70s, '80s, and early '90s. Unemployment declined
with oil prices from 1982 through 1990 and in the late 1990s.
Rising oil prices retard productivity growth and raise the
rate of unemployment at which inflation accelerates. Lower
oil prices stimulate productivity growth and lower the rate
of unemployment at which inflation accelerates. The figure
suggests the relationship may have weakened in the late 1990s,
as the economy increasingly turned away from energy-intensive
industries toward the high-tech industries that characterize
the new economy.
Figure 9 shows oil prices and a 12-month
moving average of inflation as measured by the consumer price
index. Economic research that we and others have conducted
suggests that rising oil prices contribute to inflationary
pressures. This relationship is obscured somewhat in the 1970s,
however. During the 1970s U.S. inflation appeared to lead
increases in the price of oil. A rising U.S. price level put
downward pressure on the real value of the dollar in international
exchange. The weaker dollar boosted the dollar-denominated
demand for oil and helped push oil prices upward. At the same
time, OPEC sought to maintain the purchasing power of its
oil exports by increasing the price.
In the early 1980s, U.S. disinflation
reversed the process. Since the mid-1980s, however, movements
in inflation and oil prices have been roughly coincident.
We have also seen a weaker link between rising oil prices
and core inflation—that is, inflation in all items except
food and energy. This measure of inflation is thought to provide
a better signal of underlying inflationary pressure because
it is less susceptible to the fluctuations associated with
food and energy prices. A recent study on oil prices and inflation
shows that since 1980, there is little or no pass-through
from oil price changes to core inflation. While before 1980,
oil shocks contributed substantially to core inflation. The
weaker link suggests that monetary policy has been more effective
in combating the inflationary effects of oil price shocks
since the mid-'80s.
Nevertheless, rising oil prices seem
to lead to higher interest rates as illustrated by Figure
10. If consumers see oil price increases as temporary, as
is suggested by futures prices, they would also consider the
loss of output and income associated with higher oil prices
to be temporary. To smooth their consumption across periods
of lower income, consumers would attempt to save less which
would boost interest rates.
Similarly, Alan Greenspan recently
argued that consumers will attempt to smooth their consumption
in the face of expectations of rising income associated with
productivity growth. The increased borrowing will boost market
interest rates.
Our research at the Dallas Fed suggests
that some of the recent increases in the federal funds rate
may be part of a general increase in interest rates that results
from higher oil prices. To the extent the Federal Reserve
does not allow the federal funds rate to rise with these increases
in market interest rates, inflation would be greater and more
evident in the core.
One reason recent oil price hikes may
have had less impact on national economic activity is that
the amount of energy consumed in producing each dollar of
GDP has declined. As Alan Greenspan has said, "Today's
GDP is lighter and smaller." As shown in Figure 11 however,
this development is not new.
The largest declines in energy consumption
per dollar of GDP came during the 1970s through early 1980s
when oil prices were rising rapidly. The declines slowed after
oil prices collapsed in 1986. Our back-of-the-envelope calculations
suggest that the U.S. economy is about one-third as sensitive
to oil price fluctuations today than it was when oil prices
were at their height in the early 1980s. Our calculations
also suggest that the U.S. economy is about one-half as sensitive
to oil price fluctuations than it was in the early 1970s when
real oil prices were about the same as they are today.
Oil Prices and Regional Economic Activity
As might be expected, the effects
of oil price movements differ across the states. The economies
of the energy-producing states, such as Alaska, and the three
Eleventh District states— Louisiana, New Mexico and
Texas—are helped by rising oil prices. The economies
of the energy-importing states, including eight of the nine
Twelfth District states—California, Arizona, Hawaii,
Idaho, Nevada, Oregon, Utah and Washington—are hurt
by rising oil prices.
We estimate that rising oil prices
would have hurt economic activity in 37 states and the District
of Columbia in 1982, as shown in red on the map in Figure
12. The darker the red, the stronger is the effect. For the
other 13 states, shown in green, rising oil prices would have
boosted economic activity in 1982. Again, the darker the green,
the stronger is the effect.
At the present (2000), only eight states
are helped by rising oil prices. Changes in the composition
of economic activity in Kansas, Mississippi, Montana, Utah
and West Virginia have been such that these states are now
hurt by rising oil prices rather than being helped as they
were in 1982. We also see a reduction in the intensity of
response in the other energy-producing states. For example,
we estimate that the Alaska economy is about 10 percent less
sensitive to oil price fluctuations today than it was in 1982.
We estimate that the Eleventh District economy is only one-fourth
as sensitive to oil price movements today than it was in 1982.
Furthermore, many of the state economies
that are hurt by rising oil prices are now less sensitive
to oil price increases than they were in 1982. For example,
we estimate that the seven of the Twelfth District states
that import energy are about 60 to 70 percent less sensitive
to oil price fluctuations today than they were in 1982. Diversification
away from both energy-intensive industries and energy production
are making the states more like each other in their response
to oil price movements.
Conclusions
It seems we have less reason to
be concerned about higher oil prices today. Even though oil
prices tripled over the past 18 months, they are moderate
by historical standards.
Given its market share, large reserves
and low productions costs, OPEC will remain dominant in world
oil markets. Although OPEC has been a major factor in oil
price volatility, its current policy offers the prospect of
stable prices.
Both the national and regional economies
have diversified away from energy-intensive and energy-producing
industries. Consequently, our economy is less sensitive to
oil price changes.
—Stephen P. A. Brown and Mine
K. Yücel
| About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by Stephen P. A. Brown, director
of energy economics and microeconomic policy analysis
and assistant vice president and Mine K. Yücel,
policy advisor and research officer, Research
Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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