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What s at Stake in an Economy with Low Oil Prices

Jeff Kehoe

February 15, 2016

In the past, low oil prices have been seen as a boon, particularly at the gas

pump. They ve been credited with boosting economies and stirring growth. But

recently oil prices have dropped so low that warning bells rippled through

global markets, and they remain volatile. What does all this mean for countries

and companies? How big is the risk?

For answers, I talked to Ian Bremmer, president of Eurasia Group and author of

Superpower: Three Choices for America s Role in the World. An edited version of

our conversation is below.

HBR: Do you see sustained low oil prices as a risk? How so, and how large?

Bremmer: Markets have been diving on low oil prices recently not because the

traditional understanding is broken; it is still true that low oil prices are

good for the U.S. economy as well as for Europe, China, India. All of these

consumers are going to benefit. The problem is that the IMF has been

downgrading growth. They re concerned about monetary supply, a Chinese

slowdown, crises around Europe, and also that U.S. growth is not quite as

robust as you d like it to be.

The risks in lower energy prices have a lot more to do with sustainability of

some of the governments around the world that are really dependent on commodity

revenues for their own legitimacy and power. Venezuela is going to default in

the next six months if the Chinese don t find the wherewithal to bail them out

significantly. Russia, as a big oil producer, is feeling real strains nothing

destabilizing yet, and Putin is in total control, but taxes and inflation are

going up. Nigeria is going to need a new IMF program.

Most worryingly, of course, are the petro states in the Middle East and the

emerging-market producer countries with brittle institutions that are trying to

stay stable when the one thing that provided them legitimacy the ability to

write really big checks is falling apart. Plus, we have Iranian sanctions

coming off, which is going to lead to a lot more Iranian production, a lot more

Iraqi production, and more Libyan production. These prices are going to stay

low for some time. This is structural.

There has been hand-wringing about a possible connection between sustained low

oil prices and the risk of another global recession. Could oil prices actually

be driving increased risk of a slowdown?

I don t think so. I know people say that every 7 8 years on average we ve had a

recession in the postwar era, and the last one was in 2008, so we re due.

People see all of the economic constraints in growth around the world. These

gain some momentum in the news, then seeing oil prices dive makes people grow

more negative. But that s very different from saying we re on the cusp of

another global recession, and it doesn t feel like we re entering that kind of

environment right now, oil prices or no.

Do you think lower oil prices could slow the transition away from fossil fuels,

the demand for electric vehicles, the shift to wind and solar, and other

renewable sources of energy?

Clearly, the shift in price pushes out the date that you expect these things to

really expand and become large market participants globally, but I don t think

there s any possibility the transition to renewables will just stop or slow

dramatically. We re well beyond that point. Governments around the world are

very much onboard with the notion of climate change and believe that it s going

to get worse. Industrial renewables are still going to be huge.

Keep in mind that if you re China, you need everything. The growth and energy

demand in China is immense. They re investing more in nuclear than anyone

around the world. They re not going to stop doing that because energy prices

are low. They know they need it. They re going to do huge amounts of wind, a

huge amount of solar, and that s going to continue to drive a lot of research

and to generate technological benefits in the economy as well.

In your tweets and commentary from Davos, you remarked on something called the

Fourth Industrial Revolution. How is this connected to what s going on with

oil?

By the Fourth Industrial Revolution, people mean things, like automation and

AI and genomics and 3D printing, that are going to transform every sector and

take jobs out of economies. Most people I spoke to at Davos thought that this

transformation would happen within 10 years, that we ll see dramatic changes in

the way we think about these sectors and in labor.

I generally agree, but the revolution is already hitting energy, right now.

Seems like just yesterday we thought we had peak oil, we thought we were

running out, that it was in the hands of traditional producers. Suddenly,

overnight, it s in the hands of a number of entrepreneurs unleashed on the U.S.

market. Within the course of just a few years, fracking went from being viewed

as never-going-to-happen to a world-changing technology.

America is now the largest energy producer in the world. The problem is, if you

re Saudi Arabia, it s not labor that makes your economy work, it s oil. A year

ago, if you talked to Saudi leaders, they would have told you, Oh, this is a

pipe dream, pardon the pun. They didn t prepare for this over the past decades

when times were good. Now time has suddenly turned against them very quickly.

For them, this Fourth Industrial Revolution is not only disruptive, it s

disruptive in a big way, immediately.

How should we view the fact that America is now the biggest energy producer in

the world? How does this change the U.S. perspective or behavior?

We like it, we like it a lot. What s significant is that we re no longer a

high-priced energy producer, we re a medium-priced energy producer. We were

high-priced just a year or two ago, but the fracking industry changed that. It

s very competitive, very decentralized. We re getting more efficient at

producing at a lower cost because of the market pressures.

Also, keep in mind that energy is a relatively small piece of the U.S. economy.

When you talk about what drives the U.S. economy, you re talking about finance,

you re talking about IT Apple and Facebook and others. So, on balance, low

energy prices are still an unmitigated good for the U.S. This is true from a

macro perspective as well as for the average taxpayer. Paying vastly less at

the pump equates to a significant tax break for working-class and middle-class

Americans. Many of them are still paying a lot of money just to be able to

drive back and forth from home to work.

There s been quite a bit of discussion about winners and losers. The obvious

losers are producers and the banks. The winners are consumers and,

traditionally, the overall economy. Who s missing? Are there hidden winners or

losers?

Xi Jinping is a huge winner. This is a guy that desperately needs to transform

his economy and needs to move away from low efficiency, but he doesn t want

instability. Much lower energy prices allow him to smooth a lot of the pain

that China is facing with its reforms, to actually open up to more market

pressures and respond to them without just crunching people completely with

restrictions. I think that s a real benefit for him.

I should also say, people have been concerned about a significant Chinese

slowdown. They see all of the economic constraints in growth around the world

that have been gaining momentum in the news over the last months. Then seeing

oil prices dive and stay low makes people even more anxious. But China has the

tools to push this off. The government can use further stimulus from their over

$3 trillion in reserves. Also, unlike the U.S., China can demand that Chinese

market participants actually allocate capital to continue to prop up the market

and growth. That s going to maintain economic and political stability and allow

China to continue to reform strongly. Low oil prices definitely help with that.

Lastly, what strategic points do businesses need to think about or understand

when it comes to the implications of low oil prices?

I think the big picture here is that as we re entering a world where there is

much more volatility from geopolitics and from technology, we need to recognize

that we will focus less on growth and more on resilience. It doesn t mean there

won t be some unicorns and new technologies and companies that will take off,

but generally speaking, the average investor or the average business has to

recognize that the quality of their growth is going down.

This is a world that s much more volatile, a world driven by emerging markets

that are much more brittle, where labor s going away and the consumption that

traditionally comes on the back of that is harder to guarantee. That s a world

where you generally want to ensure that your money s safer, that the markets

you re exposed to are stabler, and where you can predict market conditions more

effectively over time. I believe people are going to focus more on resilience

in their investments, on anti-fragility, on stability.

This world is changing from an economics-driven world to one that s more

politically driven, and the markets are changing in that regard. It s going to

create some big shifts.

Jeff Kehoe is a senior editor at HBR Press.