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Oil Prices, Exhaustible Resources, and Economic Growth* (PDF, 63 pages, 6.8 MB)
James D. Hamilton
Department of Economics
University of California, San Diego
... The historical record surely dictates that we take seriously the possibility that the world could soon reach a point from which a continuous decline in the annual flow rate of production could not be avoided, and inquire whether the transition to a pricing path consistent with that reality could prove to be a fairly jarring event. ...
... What we do know is that, for whatever reason, Saudi Arabia produced 600,000 fewer barrels each day in 2010 than it did in 2005, and with growing Saudi consumption of their own oil, the drop in exports from Saudi Arabia has been even more dramatic. ...
... If a peaking of global production does result in further big increases in the price of oil, it is quite possible that the expenditure share would increase significantly from where it is now, in which case even a frictionless neoclassical model would conclude that the economic consequences of reduced energy use would have to be significant. ...
... Coping with a final peak in world oil production could look pretty similar to what we observed as the economy adapted to the production plateau encountered over 2005-2009. That experience appeared to have much in common with previous historical episodes that resulted from temporary geopolitical conflict, being associated with significant declines in employment and output. If the future decades look like the last 5 years, we are in for a rough time. ...