The Perfect Storm That's
About to Hit:
Rising Oil Prices and a Weak Dollar could Shatter the Global Economy
Cape Coral, Florida
The average nationwide price of a gallon
of gasoline in America reached a record high of $1.77 this month.
The steady spike in prices has left analysts wondering if this
is a harbinger of even more dramatic increases as motorists head
into the spring and summer months.
Get ready for what might become the economy's version of the
perfect storm later this summer.
The devastation could quickly spread throughout the United States
and the rest of the world, with dire consequences for the global
economy.
The first hint of what might be in store came last month when
Opec announced its decision to withdraw 1m barrels of crude oil
a day from the market.
Opec is worried about the weakening value of the dollar: it
has lost one-third of its value in just under two years.
Since Opec sells oil for dollars, the oil-producing countries
are losing precious revenue as the value of the dollar continues
to erode. And because oil-producing countries then turn around
and purchase much of their goods and services from the EU and
must pay in euros, their purchasing power continues to deteriorate.
(The euro is currently valued at $1.23.)
How will the weaker dollar affect oil prices?
Philip K Verleger, the dean of US oil market analysts and a
visiting fellow at the Institute for International Economics,
suggests that "oil-exporting countries may decide to adjust
their price band to reflect the falling value of the dollar".
If the dollar continues to slide, he warns, we could see oil prices
rising from the current $38.18 a barrel to a record high of $40
to $80 by midsummer.
There are other dark clouds on the horizon. US crude oil inventories
are at the lowest point since the mid 70s, and the retail gasoline
market is operating with little reserve margin as we move into
the summer months, where more travel will increase demand.
The dwindling oil reserves are made worse by the White House
decision to replenish the strategic petroleum reserve, further
reducing the amount of gasoline available.
Verleger says gasoline could climb as high as $3.50 a gallon
before leveling off at $2 by the autumn.
How high prices eventually soar could depend on still other factors,
including potential oil disruptions in Venezuela and the Middle
East.
There is also the prospect that one or two major refineries
might fail during peak demand this summer , not that unusual when
increased consumer pressure forces refineries to produce at peak
capacity without taking the time for proper maintenance.
Here is where events potentially begin to feed off each other,
creating the conditions for the perfect storm for the economy.
If the price of oil increases to $40 a barrel with an accompanying
rise in gasoline prices, the already weak economic recovery could
stall.
How then do we lower the price of a barrel of oil?
We'd have to strengthen the value of the dollar so that Opec
would not be forced to raise prices to compensate for the deteriorating
value of the currency. But the dollar's value is declining because
of America's growing debt. The IMF is so concerned about US debt
the result of rising budget deficits and trade imbalance that
it issued a report warning that if steps weren't taken to reverse
the trend, it could threaten the financial stability of the world
economy.
An ever weaker dollar makes foreign investors less interested
in financing the mushrooming US debt.
The US could raise interest rates, making it more attractive
for foreign investors, but that would mean higher interest rates
for US companies and consumers, which could dampen the already
weak recovery and send us back into a recession in the US and
around the world.
So we have all the conditions coming together to create the perfect
economic storm: record oil prices triggering a restriction in
US economic growth and an increase in the federal budget deficit,
accompanied by further erosion in the value of the dollar with
increased budget deficits and the diminished value of the dollar
leading in turn to higher interest rates to convince foreign investors
to lend the US additional money, followed by a further retraction
of the US economy as rising interest rates lead to a drop in domestic
investment and consumption.
The cascade of events touches off a tsunami that engulfs the
rest of the global economy, submerging the world in deep recession.
As long as the US and global economy are increasingly dependent
on an ever-dwindling supply of oil from the Middle East, the conditions
for a perfect economic storm will continue to haunt us.
The solution, in the long run, is to wean the world off its dependency
on oil. That would require much tougher fuel efficiency standards,
greater energy conservation measures, support of hybrid vehicles
and a switch to renewable sources of energy. Short of that, expect
the storm clouds to gather in intensity.
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