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Issue 3, May/June 2004
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
Do Energy Prices Threaten the Recovery?
Rising oil and natural gas prices
have sparked concerns about the U.S. economic recovery
now under way. Higher crude oil prices often squeeze
refiners’ margins, and increased prices for petroleum
products such as gasoline, diesel and jet fuel raise
transportation costs. Higher domestic natural gas prices
pressure the U.S. petrochemicals industry—whose
foreign competitors use crude oil or lower-priced foreign
sources of natural gas—and raise costs for petrochemicals
users. Increased natural gas prices boost the cost of
producing fertilizer, which makes crop production more
costly.
Climbing energy prices also raise
costs for electric utilities and energy-intensive manufacturing
sectors, such as aluminum, which can raise costs for
other manufacturers. Of course, oil and natural gas
producers are helped by higher prices, as are oilfield
services and oilfield equipment manufacturers.
On balance, the U.S. economy has
responded poorly to higher energy prices in the past.
As Chart 1 shows, nine of the 10 post–World War
II recessions were preceded by sharply rising oil prices.
Oil prices yielded four false signals during the 1980s
and ’90s. So rising oil prices need not mean a
recession, but the historical relationship still raises
concerns about the current recovery.

In considering the effect of higher
oil and natural gas prices on the economy, several questions
arise. Why have oil prices risen, and what is the likelihood
they will be sustained? Why have natural gas prices
pulled away from their historical relationship with
crude oil prices, and what is the likelihood they will
remain decoupled? Do higher oil and natural gas prices
threaten the U.S. recovery? And how do the economic
effects differ by sector and region?
Why Oil Prices Are Higher
As Chart 2 shows, oil prices
have risen sharply since mid-2003. OPEC has a target
range of $22 to $28 per barrel for a market basket of
the crude oils it produces but has let prices rise above
that range. As a result, West Texas Intermediate (WTI)
rose to nearly $40 per barrel in early May.

A number of factors account for
the higher prices. World oil demand rose sharply in
2003, with the United States and China responsible for
much of the gain. In the United States, oil demand typically
accelerates during an economic recovery. China’s
increasing industrialization and income account for
gains in its demand. In addition, strong demand has
boosted tanker rates. OPEC has been reluctant to increase
its production sufficiently to lower prices, citing
concerns about seasonal decreases in consumption and
the possibility of increased supply from Iraq and non-OPEC
sources.
A weaker U.S. dollar also has
raised the dollar price of oil. Because the dollar has
generally declined against other major currencies since
early 2002, prices in other currencies have not risen
by nearly as much. As Chart 3 shows, the euro price
of oil closely tracked the dollar price until mid-2002
but now is about the same as it was in early 2002.

The weaker dollar affects oil
prices two ways. A lower-valued dollar increases the
ability of foreign buyers to pay dollars for oil. At
the same time, OPEC attempts to maintain its international
purchasing power by raising the dollar price of oil
as the dollar declines in value. Research shows that
a 10 percent reduction in the value of the dollar against
the currencies of other oil-consuming countries leads
to a 7.5 percent increase in the dollar price of oil.[1]
In mid-May, the futures market
showed WTI falling from about $40 toward $30 to $32
per barrel over the next few years, which is about 35
percent higher than was expected in 2003. Given expectations
of growing world demand, oil production and deliverability
will need to increase to keep prices on the trajectory
indicated by the futures market.
Why Natural Gas Prices Are Even
Higher
As Chart 4 shows, natural
gas and oil prices had a stable relationship until 2000,
with natural gas adjusting to movements in crude oil.[2]
Competition against residual fuel oil (a petroleum product)
by the industrial and electric power sectors set the
price of natural gas, as firms switched to whichever
fuel was the cheapest.

In the past few years, however,
natural gas prices have decoupled from oil prices, and
the relationship between the two has become unstable.
If the historical relationship had remained operable,
the futures market would be expecting natural gas to
fall toward about $4–$4.50 per million Btu. Instead,
the market expects prices of nearly $6 per million Btu.
Growing demand, expectations of
increased production costs and the slow development
of new sources account for the upward pressure on natural
gas prices. A recent National Petroleum Council (NPC)
study shows North Americans becoming increasingly reliant
on higher-cost sources of natural gas as demand continues
to grow.[3] Chart 5 shows past and likely future U.S.
and Canadian sources of natural gas, generally ranked
from the lowest cost at the bottom of the chart to the
highest cost at the top. As consumption grows, production
in low-cost fields in the lower 48 states will decline,
and an increasing share of natural gas will come from
higher-cost sources such as Alaska and imported liquefied
natural gas (LNG).

According to the NPC study, the
outlook for natural gas prices depends greatly on domestic
policy. Natural gas prices will be $3–$5 per million
Btu (in 2002 dollars) to the extent that public policy
encourages natural gas conservation, the increased use
of coal in electric power plants, the increased development
of natural gas in the lower 48 and Alaska, and the development
of LNG import facilities. To the extent that public
policy does not encourage conservation, fuel switching
and the development of additional natural gas resources,
prices will be $5–$7.25 per million Btu.
As the NPC study suggests, natural
gas prices could remain elevated relative to their historical
relationship with crude oil prices. The likely range
is $3.50–$6.50 per million Btu, a range generally
consistent with what experts see as technically feasible
prices for LNG and natural gas from Alaska on the low
end and with public policy not fostering sufficient
conservation, fuel switching and natural gas development
on the high end. Consistent with the futures market,
the most likely range of natural gas prices in the near
future is $5–$6 per million Btu, an outlook that
is about 30 percent higher than the historical relationship
with crude oil prices. Such an estimate is slightly
above the middle of the range set in the NPC study,
and it incorporates the judgment that energy markets
will take time to adjust to higher prices. This outlook
is higher than those foreseen in recent Energy Information
Administration and Energy Modeling Forum analyses, which
are dominated by technical feasibility.[4]
Looking forward to the next decade,
a major expansion of U.S. capabilities to import LNG
may be under way, a development spurred by improved
liquefaction technology and growing U.S. demand for
natural gas. There are also good prospects for bringing
substantial quantities of natural gas to the lower 48
from Alaska. Such developments bode well for increased
natural gas availability and lower prices by 2010. In
the near term, however, deliverability constraints are
likely to mean elevated natural gas prices.
Effects on U.S. Economy Likely
to Be Mild
Although oil and natural
gas prices have risen sharply, they will likely have
only mild effects on overall economic activity. Energy
price shocks have less effect on economic activity than
in the past, and the economy is in a strong recovery.
If the longer-term outlook for
oil prices is about 35 percent higher than previously
expected and natural gas prices are 30 percent above
their historical relationship with crude oil prices,
real GDP will be 0.9 percent lower than it would otherwise
be. Most of the reduction in GDP (0.7 percentage point)
results from the joint movement of oil and natural gas
prices. Some (0.2 percentage point) results from natural
gas decoupling from its historical relationship with
crude oil.[5] The price level (as measured by the GDP
deflator) will be increased by about the same amount
as GDP is reduced, and there will be slight upward pressure
on short-term interest rates.[6]
The loss in GDP will take two
to three years to fully materialize. In an economy growing
at about 3.5 to 4 percent annually, a one-time reduction
of 0.9 percent that is spread out over two to three
years won’t derail the recovery.
These are milder effects than
economists have estimated for past increases in oil
and natural gas prices, and several factors account
for the difference.[7] The increase in oil prices is
fairly moderate by historical standards. In today’s
dollars, the price of oil in 1981–82 would be
about $75 to $80 per barrel. In addition, the energy-to-GDP
ratio has declined by more than 50 percent since the
early 1980s.
Firms also have more experience
with energy price shocks. In the past, businesses might
have understood how the shocks affected them directly,
but they had difficulty understanding how the shocks
affected the segments of the economy with which they
interacted. The result was coordination problems across
the economy that intensified the shocks’ negative
effects. With their experience with past shocks, today’s
firms can better predict how other segments of the economy
will respond, reducing coordination problems.
The sectoral and regional economic
effects of higher oil and natural gas prices will be
uneven. Energy-intensive industries will incur higher
costs and suffer reduced profit margins, while energy
producers will be helped. Regions with the highest concentrations
of energy-intensive industries will be hurt, and regions
with energy-producing industries will be helped.
Research finds that 42 states
and the District of Columbia are hurt by higher oil
and natural gas prices. Eight states—Alaska, Louisiana,
Colorado, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Texas
and Wyoming—are helped.[8]
Oil prices are likely to remain
elevated for the foreseeable future—about 35 percent
higher than previously expected—and natural gas
prices seem likely to remain about 30 percent above
their historical relationship with crude oil prices.
These prices are only a slight drag on economic activity
and do not threaten the current recovery. The economic
effects will be uneven across industries and regions.
Energy-producing states with energy-intensive industries—such
as Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas—are
likely to benefit slightly.
Although high energy prices do
not threaten the recovery, Americans cannot be complacent
about energy development. Many of the factors behind
the recent surge in prices, such as China’s rising
oil demand and deliverability constraints for natural
gas, will be with us for some time. Substantial worldwide
investment in oil production, LNG facilities, pipelines
and the electricity grid will be needed to keep energy
prices from rising above their current course.
—Stephen P. A. Brown
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| About
the Author
Brown is director
of energy economics and microeconomic policy
analysis in the Research Department of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Notes
- “Exchange Rates and World Oil
Prices,” by Stephen P. A. Brown
and Keith R. Phillips, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas Economic Review,
March 1986.
- “Have Oil and Natural Gas Prices
Decoupled?” presented by Stephen
P. A. Brown and Mine K. Yücel at
a meeting of Energy Modeling Forum 20,
Fuel Diversity, Natural Gas and North
American Energy Markets, University of
Maryland, July 2003.
- Balancing Natural Gas Policy—Fueling
the Demands of a Growing Economy,
National Petroleum Council, Washington,
D.C., September 2003. Other studies, including
those conducted by the Energy Information
Administration and a recent study by the
Stanford Energy Modeling Forum, have also
found the United States and Canada will
become increasingly reliant on higher-cost
sources of natural gas.
- Annual Energy Outlook 2004,
Energy Information Administration, Washington
D.C., 2004; and Fuel Diversity, Natural
Gas and North American Energy Markets,
by Hillard G. Huntington, Energy Modeling
Forum, Stanford University, 2003.
- All previous empirical work on the economic
effects of energy price shocks is based
on the linked movements of oil and natural
gas prices because historically these
prices have moved together. To assess
the economic effects of an independent
natural gas price shock, I make use of
the fact that natural gas represents 40
percent of combined U.S. consumption of
oil and natural gas. The resulting estimates
provide only an approximation because
natural gas differs from oil in several
respects. Most natural gas is produced
domestically, and most oil is imported.
In addition, natural gas is used primarily
in the industrial and commercial sectors,
and oil is used primarily in transportation.
These differences may offset each other.
See “U.S. Natural Gas Prices Heat
Up,” by Stephen P. A. Brown, Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas Southwest Economy,
September/October 2003.
- At the firm level, higher energy prices
will lead to reduced energy use and lower
output than was otherwise expected. The
aggregate effect of an unfavorable supply
shock on the economy is similar. An input
scarcity, which is indicated (in this
case) by higher energy prices, leads to
a slowing of GDP growth and productivity,
which leads to slower wage growth and
an increase in the unemployment rate.
If monetary policy remains neutral (which
it has done historically), the price level
will rise by about the same as GDP falls.
Because consumers expect the near-term
effects to be greater than the longer-term
effects, they will attempt to smooth consumption
by borrowing or saving less, which will
boost short-term rates.
This analysis uses Robert Gordon’s
definition of neutral monetary policy,
in which nominal GDP is held constant.
See “Oil Prices and U.S. Aggregate
Economic Activity: A Question of Neutrality,”
by Stephen P. A. Brown and Mine K. Yücel,
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas Economic
and Financial Review, Second Quarter
1999.
- See “Business Cycles: The Role
of Energy Prices,” by Stephen P.
A. Brown, Mine K. Yücel and John
Thompson, in Encyclopedia of Energy,
vol. 1, Cutler J. Cleveland, editor, San
Diego, Calif.: Elsevier, 2004, pp. 265–76.
- See “Energy Prices and State Economic
Performance,” by Stephen P. A. Brown
and Mine Yücel, Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas Economic Review, Second
Quarter 1995.
About Southwest Economy
Southwest Economy
is published six times annually by the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas. The views expressed
are those of the authors and should not
be attributed to the Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas or the Federal Reserve System.
Articles may be reprinted
on the condition that the source is credited
and a copy is provided to the Research Department
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
Southwest Economy
is available free of charge by writing the
Public Affairs Department, Federal Reserve
Bank of Dallas, P.O. Box 655906, Dallas,
TX 75265-5906, or by telephoning (214) 922-5254. |
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