Abstract

Due to the increasing value of the dollar, world oil prices rose rather than fell relative to the price of OECD exports between 1980 and 1984. The real crude oil price of OECD countries increased by approximately 30% more than its counterpart for the USA. This paper calculates that if OECD oil prices had not risen but followed the trend for US prices, world oil demand in 1984 would have been about 3 million barrels per day — 6.6% higher than otherwise. Two plausible scenarios which assume the same nominal oil price, US inflation rate and OECD growth rate but different values for the dollar are considered. World oil consumption by 1990 could vary by 4 million barrels per day, depending upon shifts in the exchange rates and the value of the dollar. This variation is comparable to the range associated with significant differences in the economic growth rate between now and 1990. The paper shows that shifts in exchange rates could produce changes in oil prices in 1990 comparable to the effects of gradually removing 5 million barrels per day from total oil production by 1990.

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