The Washington Post. no less.
IMF
study: Peak oil could do serious damage to the global economy
27
October, 2012
The
world isn’t going to run out of oil anytime soon. But there’s still
concern among various geologists and analysts that our oil supply
won’t grow as quickly or as easily as it used to. We’ll have to
resort to harder-to-drill oil to satisfy our crude habits. More
expensive oil. That would push prices up. And high oil prices could
act as a drag on growth.
This,
at any rate, is the
basic idea behind
“peak oil.” And there’s some reason for worry. Between 1981 and
2005, world oil production grew at a steady pace of about 1.8 percent
per year. All was well. But starting around 2005, oil production
appeared to plateau. And, since demand for oil kept rising,
especially in countries like China and India, that caused prices to
soar. Oil doesn’t get much cheaper than $100 per barrel these days.
And that, some economists worry, has acted as a drag on growth around
the world.
So
how bad would it be if peak oil was really upon us? That’s a
question that two IMF economists try to tackle in a new working
paper, “Oil
and the World Economy: Some Possible Futures.” (pdf)
The authors, Michael Kumhof and Dirk Muir, don’t make any
definitive predictions about how the oil supply will evolve. Rather,
they try to model a number of different scenarios in which
oil does become
more scarce and the world tries to adapt.
The
paper itself offers an interesting look at how the world might cope
with higher oil prices, so let’s take a look at the various
scenarios:
1)
Oil production grows very slowly or plateaus.
This
is the baseline scenario that Kumhof and Muir use. They assume that
oil grows by about 1 percentage point less each year than its
historical average. So, let’s say, oil grows at a steady 0.8
percent per year rather than the 1.8 percent annual average between
1981 and 2005. This isn’t a temporary oil disruption like the one
we saw in 2008. It’s a persistent, long-term supply shock.
What
would happen? Oil prices, the IMF model suggests, would gradually
double in 10 years and quadruple over 20 years. Regions that import
oil on net, such as Europe and the United States, would see a small
hit to growth—about 0.2 to 0.4 percentage points each year.
Countries that export, like Saudi Arabia, would get a lot wealthier.
2)
Oil production grows at a slower rate, but the world adapts fairly
easily.
In
this scenario, oil production declines, but countries start switching
to electric cars or fueling their vehicles with natural gas. Vehicles
and manufacturers become more efficient. In economist terms, the
“elasticity” of demand quickly increases.
Under
this scenario, the United States and Europe take just a small hit to
growth, about 0.1 to 0.2 percentage points per year. Japan and Asia
actually get a boost to their economy, since they can adapt to higher
oil prices and export
more stuff to oil-producing countries in the Middle East. All told,
this is a fairly happy outcome.
3)
Oil production grows at a slower rate, but the world can’t find
substitutes.
As
the IMF authors note, it’s not assured that the world can quickly
adapt to steadily increasing oil prices. Oil is, after all, quite
valuable and hard to replace. Electric cars may not catch on. It’s
tough to build infrastructure for natural-gas vehicles. The chemical
industry might struggle to find substitutes for oil as feedstock. The
oil substitutes that result turn out to be lower-quality. In this
scenario, wealthy regions like Europe, the United States, and Japan
take an annual GDP hit of 0.4 percent to 0.6 percent. That starts to
hurt.
4)
Oil turns out to be far more important than most economists had
assumed.
The
Energy Information Administration estimates that
petroleum purchases make up just 3.5 percent of the U.S. economy.
Looked at from that angle, expensive oil shouldn’t do too much
damage. But, the IMF authors note, several books and articles have
pointed out that
this understates how crucial oil is to the functioning of a modern
economy. Many key technologies contain materials or use fuels derived
from crude.
If,
in fact, oil is much more important than many economic modelers have
assumed, then the blow to growth from even a modest plateau in oil
could be quite large—lowering growth rates by up to 1.2 percentage
points over the next two decades.
5)
Oil production starts shrinking rapidly.
This
is the doomsday scenario. Some studies have
suggested that
global oil production is currently on a plateau and will soon start
shrinking in by around 2 percent per year. Existing wells will dry
up. The world will increasingly rely on oil from places that are more
expensive to develop, such as Canada’s tar sands. What happens
then?
Nothing
good. According to the IMF’s modeling, prices could increase by 800
percent over two decades. Growth rates in Europe and the United
States would be reduced by at least a full percentage point—and
much more if oil turns out to be more important than we thought.
“Relative price changes of this magnitude would be unprecedented,”
the authors note, “and would almost certainly have nonlinear
effects on GDP that the model is not able to capture adequately.”
Yikes.
In
any case, these scenarios aren’t easy to model—especially since
nations might respond in unpredictable ways. (If crude output started
shriveling, some oil producers could start restricting exports. Or
fuel subsidies could affect demand elasticity. ) All told, however,
the IMF authors say it’s quite possible that a decent-sized decline
in oil production could have “dramatic” effects that could prove
very, very difficult for the world to adjust to.
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