Title of article :
Politics—not OPEC interventions—explain oilʹs extraordinary price history
Author/Authors :
Marian Radetzki، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages :
4
From page :
382
To page :
385
Abstract :
Oil prices in 2008–10, measured in constant money, were almost eight times the level of 1970–72. The prices of minerals and metals, another exhaustible resource group, increased by a mere 45% in the same period. The paper contends that the actions of OPEC, primarily production quotas, cannot account for this stark difference in price performance. Neither can the evolution of oil prices be rationalized by cost developments, for costs have remained far below the prices. The price evolution is better explained by capacity constraints caused by the inefficiency of state owned enterprises that dominate the oil industry since the 1970s, and that, additionally, have been deprived by their owners of financial resources to invest in capacity maintenance and growth. A capacity-destroying “resource curse” afflicting many oil producing nations, has been a further factor driving prices upwards.
Keywords :
State owned enterprises , Oil prices and costs , OPEC
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Serial Year :
2012
Journal title :
Energy Policy
Record number :
973963
Link To Document :
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