Jubak on Saudi Oil
Saudi Arabia is running the U.S. economy.
I'm not sure the Saudis want the task, but they've got it. Because the United States still doesn't have a national energy policy, we've thrown decisions about how fast our economy grows and whether our standard of living rises or falls into the hands of Saudi Arabia's oil ministry. [...]
It's now Saudi Arabia that's trying to find a delicate balance. In the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the Saudis are the swing producer -- the only major oil producer with enough extra production capacity to increase supply when the price of a barrel of crude soars, and the only major oil producer with the political will and foresight to cut supply when prices fall too low. Right now, the Saudis are producing at 8.5 million barrels a day. Depending on whose figures you believe, their production capacity is anywhere from 9 million to 11 million barrels a day.
If the Saudis allow oil prices to climb too high, then consumers will cut back on use, and energy alternatives will become sufficiently attractive to investors to cut into oil's share of the global energy market. Worst case: Oil prices will climb so high that they cause a global recession that will certainly cut demand.
If the Saudis allow oil prices to fall too much, they will reduce the revenue they get for oil and reduce their clout among those oil-producing countries that are only willing to follow the Saudi lead as long as it lines their pockets. Worst case: Revenue falls so far that the Saudis and other oil-producing countries don't have the cash to support their own plans for growing their economies and providing the jobs and subsidies that keep many oil-country governments in power. [...]
The U.S. economy is no exception. Total oil imports into the United States jumped by 14% in March from February to hit record levels. And even as gasoline prices soar in the United States, consumption growth continues. U.S. gasoline demand in May was up about 1% from May 2006.
How much clout does that give the Saudis over the U.S. economy?The United States imports about two-thirds of its oil at a cost of about $300 billion a year. According to a study by the Rand Corp., each $10 increase in the cost of a barrel costs the average American household $700 a year.
In January 2004, the price of oil was $34.27 a barrel, according to the St. Louis Federal Reserve. It closed at $65.08 on June 1, 2007. Using Rand's numbers, that's an increase of $2,156 per household for oil. In that same period -- when the Federal Reserve's short-term interest rate increases pushed the yield on the 10-year Treasury note to 4.95% from 4.30% -- U.S. Gross Domestic Product growth dropped from 3.9% in 2004 to 3.2% in 2005, 3.3% in 2006 and to 0.6% in the first quarter of 2007. I certainly can't tease out the effects of higher oil prices from the effects of higher interest rates, but my suspicion is that the former has had a bigger effect on the U.S. economy in this period than the latter, thanks to the continued availability of cheap money from global sources such as Japan.
Saudi Arabia has no interest in killing the U.S. or the global golden goose. Sending our economy or, worse yet, the global economy into a recession, or even quarter after quarter of growth below 2%, would wreak havoc with Saudi revenues.
But it is in Saudi self-interest to charge the most the market will bear; after all, oil is an exhaustible resource. Even though we can debate about when that resource might be so depleted that Saudi Arabia can't produce significant oil, we all know that one day the oil will be gone. So every time a terrorist attack in Nigeria, a flare-up in tension between the United States and Iran or an expropriation by Venezuela's Hugo Chavez spikes the price of oil, you can bet the Saudis are studying the market response. If a price spike doesn't result in a significant decline in consumption, then the inclination of any rational oil producer would be to let prices drift higher (or to push them higher by cutting production). [...]