Interesting... written in 1999.

http://www.pkarchive.org/crises/OilNonCrisis.html

The energy non-crisis explained
by Paul Krugman
2.1.99

SYNOPSIS: Will there be an energy crisis?

Recently I picked up a book that predicts a long-term glut in the oil 
market. Potential oil reserves, the book asserts, are huge relative 
to world oil demand, and costs of production are declining. Although 
the oil cartel has had some success in keeping prices up, its power 
is waning. The prospect is for flat or falling prices as far as the 
eye can see. Sound reasonable in these days of exceedingly low 
petroleum prices? Well, yes-but Morris Adelman's The World Petroleum 
Market was published in 1973. You might call this a case of oil wells 
that ended well-that Adelman had it right and that the oil price 
hikes that began almost as soon as the book was in print were merely 
a blip. But what a blip! Oil now sells for around $10 a barrel, which 
in real terms is about what it sold for in 1972. In 1975 the price 
rose to the equivalent of $25, and peaked in 1981 at around $53; not 
until 1985 did the era of high oil prices truly come to an end.

And during those dozen years of high oil prices, the energy crisis 
loomed large in economics and politics. Oil shocks, argued many 
economists, were a major culprit in the "stagflation" that afflicted 
the world economy. Jimmy Carter told us that to fight the energy 
crisis, the nation needed to declare the "moral equivalent of war." 
(Washington desperately needed someone to police these 1970s-era 
acronyms. In addition to the "meow" program, we also had a Council on 
Wage and Price Stability, or "cowpiss".) Lines at the gas pumps 
helped make Ronald Reagan President; reckless "recycling" of Arab oil 
money helped cause the Latin American debt crisis.

How could such a thing happen? During the '70s, doomsayers declared 
that the world was running out of resources, civilization was doomed, 
and that was that. In retrospect, it seems clear that this was all 
wrong; experts like Adelman were right that there was plenty of oil 
and for that matter most minerals. (Renewable resources like 
fisheries are another story.) But then how could prices have gone so 
high for so long? One answer is that this was a case of a cartel that 
made good, then went bad. For a while, goes the story, oil-producing 
nations agreed to limit their production and raise prices; but then 
they got greedy, started cheating, and the whole thing fell apart. 
The trouble with this story is that OPEC was never a very cooperative 
group; indeed, during the cartel's glory days two of its members 
fought a remarkably vicious war with each other. How can so 
quarrelsome a club have been effective enough to engineer the most 
spectacular commodity price increases in history?

Another answer says that OPEC was a myth, that it was all really 
about Saudi Arabia, which was essentially the pricemaker for the 
world. According to this story, the global shortage following the 
1973 Arab-Israeli war revealed to the Saudis that they had far more 
market power than they realized-that if they cut production, nobody 
else was in a position to make up the shortfall, and prices would 
soar. So they took advantage of this discovery, but over time their 
market power was eroded by cutbacks in demand and new sources of 
supply. Eventually they realized that by restricting their production 
they were simply providing a price umbrella to their cheating OPEC 
partners, and the game was up.

Yet a third story says the energy crisis was a classic case of market 
instability. Oilrich countries found it hard to spend the new wealth 
generated by high prices, so they attempted to save for the 
future-believing wrongly that the best way to do that was to leave 
the oil in the ground. The initial result was that higher oil prices 
reduced supply and drove prices still higher-but eventually it became 
clear that oil in the ground wasn't that good an investment after 
all, and the bubble burst.

So what's the right story? Nobody knows-and we're not likely to find 
out. You see, when oil prices dropped after 1985, interest fell off. 
Grants to study the economics of energy dried up; ambitious 
economists shifted to other topics. Never mind that the rise and fall 
of oil prices was one of the most spectacular and puzzling events in 
economic history; as soon as oil was cheap again, the subject was 
dropped.

And that is a shame. History is the main laboratory for economic 
theory; a theory of markets that can't explain the energy crisis is 
probably not much good for anything else. Moreover, as the saying 
goes, history may not repeat itself, but it does rhyme. Anyone who 
thought that the banking crises and liquidity traps of the 1930s 
carried no lessons for the modern world has had a rude awakening in 
the past year and a half, as Asia has experienced a minor-key replay 
of the Great Depression. Wanna bet that one of these days the energy 
crisis will seem equally relevant?

Originally published, 2.1.99

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