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Oil Consumption vs GDP

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Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby NTBKtrader » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 16:54:33

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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby mekrob » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 17:02:20

Yeah, but minimum wage was $9/hr back then (in 2007 dollars). I'm sure general wages haven't kept up as much as gas, or at least as much as that indicates. We've had a massive amount of transfer of wealth from the poor and middle to the upper class since then thanks to Reagan and the Bushes.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby Qolio » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 20:58:40

Can someone explain me what the formula here behind the "Oil consumption per dollar GDP" is? I'm not able to come up with numbers of the same magnitude. If US oil consumption is 20 Mbbl per day, and yearly GDP about $13 trillion, then shouldn't it be 365*20e6/13e12 = 0.00056?? [smilie=eusa_think.gif]
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby pup55 » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 21:12:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'O')il consumption per dollar GDP


You need a better definition of GDP. By the current definition, if Paris Hilton gets locked up, and pays a lawyer to try to argue her way out of it, that counts as a service (questionable that it may be) and goes into the calculation of GDP.

So I am ready to say that the percentage of the economy that consists of this type of bovine feces (not to be confused with actual bovine feces, which, ironically, is a useful product that might actually constitute a benefit for society) is a lot higher now than it was in the 70's when this reached its peak.

So take GDP, and subtract out all of the lawyers, insurance companies, "financial services" (whatever that is) medical care for people that smoked (a net detriment to society but somehow is counted as a positive value for computation of GDP), and then re-do the graph and see what it looks like.

I hypothesize that will show is the amount of "useful GDP" per unit of oil is pretty close to constant, and the amount of so-called GDP that consists of non-productive activity is about 50% of the economy right now.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby DantesPeak » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 21:51:01

I think a more useful measure is industrail production vs. oil consumption, because the IP figures is inclusive of most all domestic energy use and not specifically adjusted for swings in oil use caused by weather.

GDP figures do not include the energy use embedded in imports, which as everyone knows, have gone up very substantially in the last 30 years. GDP figures also include military spending, but not the oil used by the US military.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby Bas » Sun 01 Jul 2007, 22:18:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Qolio', 'C')an someone explain me what the formula here behind the "Oil consumption per dollar GDP" is? I'm not able to come up with numbers of the same magnitude. If US oil consumption is 20 Mbbl per day, and yearly GDP about $13 trillion, then shouldn't it be 365*20e6/13e12 = 0.00056?? [smilie=eusa_think.gif]


LOL yeah, it looks like you need 2 barrels of oil for one dollar of GDP, that can't be right.

it should be 13trillion/365X20million= 1780 dollar GDP/barrel (or your 0.00056 barrel/dollar gdp)

Horrible graph, seems to me they use promillage on the right side but than barrel per dollar doesn't make sense; it must be prommilage of a dollar GDP/barrel, (I'm getting confused now)
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby MrBill » Mon 02 Jul 2007, 04:46:59

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('DantesPeak', 'I') think a more useful measure is industrail production vs. oil consumption, because the IP figures is inclusive of most all domestic energy use and not specifically adjusted for swings in oil use caused by weather.

GDP figures do not include the energy use embedded in imports, which as everyone knows, have gone up very substantially in the last 30 years. GDP figures also include military spending, but not the oil used by the US military.


You're right. The current measurement does not reveal very much information due to the distortions you mention.

As well crude oil is not the only source of either energy or economic growth. We (collectively) use a lot of natural gas, coal, hydro, etc. for economic growth, while much of our crude is mainly used as a transport fuel.

Also, a Rolex may cost many times more than a Casio watch, even though they are near perfect substitutes for one another. Their difference in value and therefore their effect on GDP is not explained by the differing units of energy inputs each one takes to manufacture.

As you mentioned above the manufacture of imports is not included, but the fuel used to distribute them domestically is part of the consumption of crude naturally, and any profit earned on their re-sale does go to calculate GDP as well.

But in a mainly services orientated economy I am not sure that measuring only industrial production is an accurate measure either? To ignore the economic gains of services because they are not manufactured in the traditional sense of the word is to miss out on roughly two-thirds of the economy.

Getting Paris Hilton out of jail may not be a socially worthwhile addition to GDP, but the enforceability of commercial contracts by lawyers certainly does help produce an environment conducive to domestic GDP growth. Any line you draw between goods & services will be arbitrary by its nature.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby nocar » Mon 02 Jul 2007, 08:07:27

Well, I reason as Heinberg in 'the party is over'. If you are concerned with oil dependency, oil use per GDB is not as relevant as the fact that oil use is increasing (although the chart indicates it might have turned down right at the end of the time period).

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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby pup55 » Mon 02 Jul 2007, 08:25:19

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'b')ut the enforceability of commercial contracts by lawyers certainly does help produce an environment conducive to domestic GDP growth.


You are probably right on this,

If you have too little regulation, you have Nigeria, where no one can get anything done because no one trusts anyone. On the other hand, you have DC, where you can be sued for $54 million for screwing up a pair of pants. In between, you have China, where contracts are more or less enforceable, but they do not pay too much attention to issues like copyright law and/or food and drug regulations.

Plus we all agree that driving to work in a humvee contributes more to GDP than biking to work, because it generates sales of both humvees and fuel consumption, which both contribute to GDP.

So, returning back to the original graph: What does this really mean? Anything?
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby Windmills » Mon 02 Jul 2007, 14:29:49

Some people have then gone on to interpret the supposed decoupling of GDP growth and energy usage as meaning we've becoming so crazily energy efficient that we can practically do anything in the US without needing any energy at all. In reality, we're just doing less and less that requires real, physical effort. Part of the story is certainly the fact that for decades we've been exporting more and more of our energy intensive and polluting industries to other countries while still maintaining growth. We've also being growing the economy with credit and debt, which only requires enough energy to swipe a card or sign a contract. Then you also have the slight of hand going on with the Fed and the money supply. The deeper you look, the more it all seems like a big scam and the more meaningless graphs like these seem to be.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby matt21811 » Mon 02 Jul 2007, 19:07:02

Windmills,
just because I can swipe a card to pay for goods instead of going to the physical effort of drving to the bank, seeing a teller, getting out some cash, then driving back to the store to buy the goods doesnt make the former a bad thing.
The same thing happened in both examples, goods were bought from a store. One just takes less energy than the other.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby MrBill » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 03:10:17

You can interpret the graph in one of two ways (at least).

One is you have twice as much GDP per unit of oil (or energy) due to the shift from manufacturing to services and/or real gains in productivity/efficiency. That would be good.

The second less benign conclusion is that due to physical shortages of oil (or energy) you lose twice as much GDP as before. Especially if productivity/efficiency gains means less non-core transport to cut. That would be bad.

If you run a $5 trillion economy on 20 mbpdoe* (incl. your other sources of energy), and then you run a $10 trillion economy on 20 mbpdoe, it is obvious that if you lose any or all of your 20 mbpdoe it will have a more pronounced effect on your $10 trillion economy than the $5 trillion economy in terms of lost GDP.

This is not just funny money as is being suggested. It is real economic output.

A friend of mine just finished structuring a $1 billion deal to build a NG N2 plant in the ME. It was syndicated to 10 international banks. They must hold at least of 50% of those loans on their own books, but they can sell off the other 50% to other banks or investors.

So of course to build such a plant in the ME to produce NG, which will be sold to produce food somewhere else, generating economic gains that can be taxed to pay for social services as well as providing livelyhoods at each step of the chain you require a lot of 'services'.

Services such as engineering skills, project management skills, lawyers with international experience, banks with their risk management skills, salesmen that sell off pieces of the syndicated loans, all the way back to the independent investment advisors that help allocate individual investment portfolios for savers/investors around the globe.

So the industrial production in the ME that supports growing food is dependent on services. No legally binding contracts with many covenants, no syndicated loans, and no funding to build the NG plant.

If one step in that process generates, say, $100.000+, in fee income along the value chain then I do not see how that is somehow inferior to building a tractor or combine worth $100.000+ in order to plant and harvest the grain that depends on that N2 fertilizer?

Obviously any physical energy shortage effects both the goods and the services dependent on that supply of NG that will reduce GDP at all stages of that value-added chain - NG production, agriculture, manufacturing and services.

*mbpdoe - million barrels per day oil equivalents
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby cube » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 03:59:58

Is this graph adjusted for inflation?

Somebody should put a graph of GDP vs. debt. I know for sure it takes a lot more debt today to produce GDP

Perhaps an argument can be said we did not make any "improvements" per say. We simply traded one for the other.

We became more efficient in our use of oil at the expense of becoming less efficient with debt.

For example we outsourced a lot of the energy intensive industries to China to minimize our oil use but that just left us with a nasty trade deficit == debt...there's an interesting theory. :-D
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby MrBill » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 04:18:55

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', 'I')s this graph adjusted for inflation?

Somebody should put a graph of GDP vs. debt. I know for sure it takes a lot more debt today to produce GDP

Perhaps an argument can be said we did not make any "improvements" per say. We simply traded one for the other.

We became more efficient in our use of oil at the expense of becoming less efficient with debt.

For example we outsourced a lot of the energy intensive industries to China to minimize our oil use but that just left us with a nasty trade deficit == debt...there's an interesting theory. :-D


Cube, substituting capital for land or labor through investments in technology is sometimes the only way to improve efficiency.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'J')ust beginning to show signs of costs peaking
We recently held a call with Sberbank, in addition to attending an analyst meeting. We have few concerns over credit growth, asset quality or even margins. The key sensitivity is costs - which have admittedly been growing at a more than healthy tick. In this note we benchmark Sberbank vs. GEM peers, with interesting results.
We think there is reason to believe cost growth has peaked. First, one-off effects such as deposit insurance charges and higher depreciation on revalued property are "in the base". Second, we believe Sberbank employees are now paid much more on par with other banking sector staff. Third, a major push in IT should mean the days of adding more labour instead of capital are coming to an end. Finally, we think management has a clear desire to limit cost growth, as margins begin to fall, slowing down revenues.



Source: Merrill Lynch on Sberbank
Costs peaking, transparency improving
July 3rd, 2007

There is nothing wrong with debt, so long as it generates a positive return (i.e. you have to cover your long-term cost of capital, plus generate a return on that capital over and above what you could earn by buying risk free government debt).

And debt is a lot more environmentally friendly if it improves your EROEI through efficiency gains or less polluting technology.

The problem is that central banks kept interest rates far too low for far too long, while governments, especially the US, ran deficit budgets even during expansionary periods when they should have been paying down debt.

In other words debt was too cheap, so it encouraged borrowing, spending and investing in projects that would not have covered their long-term cost of capital plus an excess return over and above say nominal inflation. A misallocation of capital.

Ironically, misallocated capital may have encouraged places like China to build too much capacity, which increases the need for energy to build it and run it as well as to produce to cover their own costs of operation. This shifts production from, say, a G7 economy that gets 'X' output from each unit of input of energy to production in a country that gets substantially less than 'X' if China uses more energy per unit of output, which it does.

And not only that, but China's energy mix is dirtier than, say, the G7 average. Another cost of capital that is not priced correctly. Just like underpriced energy encourages over-use and waste, so does mispriced capital.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby MrBill » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 11:00:59

While reading The Capital Spectator - Money, Oil, Economics & the Search for the Bottom Line - I stumbled across an article directly related to Oil Consumption vs GDP. I have only managed to wade through the first 11 pages of this 59 page research paper, but I have gleened some tidbits of information on the topic at hand.

First to give credit where credit is due. If you do not already read these pages on a regular basis, I can recommend them for their good ideas and analysis.
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')EPARATE BUT UNEQUAL
The time has come to once and for all put to rest the notion that crude oil and gasoline are joined at the hip as commodities in solidarity.

Yes, there's a thin veil of truth to the myth, born of the fact that the latter is refined from the former. But for all practical purposes, it's prudent to consider each separately from the other. The reason: each is driven by a separate, and at times dissimilar set of supply and demand factors.

Still, the two appear to share a commonality in pricing trend at times, promoting the illusion of equality. But as the news from Iran reminds, the danger in the conceit carries more than a little risk for clear thinking on energy matters.

Source: SEPARATE BUT UNEQUAL


Now back to summarizing the research paper. This is paraphrasing, so my apologies if I get something out of context. The complete paper can be found here.

The Economic Effects of Energy Price Shocks

Before jumping down my throat about economists and their analysis please note the title. Energy Price Shocks, Not Physical Supply Shocks. Also, if you have better historical data and analysis then please share it with us. Thanks.

So some points made in the first 11 pages of the article on oil consumption vs GDP. I add my comments as I go. Sorry not to mix them up with the author's.

1. On the price of oil demand shocks have proved more important than supply shocks. This is working with historical data going back to 1973, so it is no guarantee looking forward if historical patterns breakdown. None the less it is for many here counter-intuitive.

2. There is only a casual relationship between the price of oil and GDP growth. This may be why we have seen strong global growth in the past few years despite rising energy prices as well as commodities and base metals as the higher prices have been lead by demand.

3. The price of oil responds to GDP growth, but only with a delay.In otherwords, cheap oil does not necessarily result in higher economic output (think Japan in 1990s), but higher economic output will eventually lead to higher energy prices due to demand using up slack existing capacity.

4. The price of gasoline matters more than the price of oil. And is more prone to supply disruption from refinery problems than locating alternate supplies of crude.

5. As of 2002 the energy used by 'consumers' was broken down as

48.7% gasoline
12.3% NG
33.8% electricity

Source: BEA

6. As of 2002 the energy used by 'producers' was broken down as

40.3% electricity
14.5% NG
14% gasoline
11.4% diesel
9.7% jet fuel

Source: BLS

these are US numbers. They may vary by country to country? In fact they do. I just don't have the other breakdowns for comparison purposes.

7. Demand destruction in the economy from higher energy prices is in a disruption in spending on non-energy related good & services, not by reducing energy consumption which is fairly inelastic. Which I think most of us believed to be the case anyway

8. The primary mechanism of DIRECT demand destruction for goods & servies comes about due to

a. a reduction in discretionary income from higher outlays on energy

b. uncertainty over future income causes consumers and producers to delay purchases

c. consumers and firms increase precautionary savings to deal with uncertain future energy prices

d. consumers and producers forgo purchases of energy using devices (or switch to more efficient designs) or the so-called 'operating cost effect',

AND

9. INDIRECTLY demand destruction (or secondary demand destruction) comes from the so-called 'reallocation effect' on capital spending as labor moves out of those sectors related directly to the manufacture of energy using devices such as the automotive industry as demand, or projected demand, falls.Again pretty much what many of us suspected.

I will try to read more of the research paper tomorrow, but it would appear that the chart (above) showing almost a continuous drop in the number of barrels of oil to produce a unit of GDP in the USA was only casually related to the price of oil, or the rate of GDP growth. And as was mentioned before probably has more to do with efficiency or productivity gains as well as the shift from manufacturing to services as a proportion of total GDP.

However, as China Inc. is trying to increase total manufacturing while cutting their oil input per unit of output their own chart will look similiar. In this case it is not a switch into services, but gains from greater efficiency even if total demand is still rising. At least that is my take on it?
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby cube » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 17:04:27

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', '
')Source: Merrill Lynch on Sberbank
Costs peaking, transparency improving
July 3rd, 2007

There is nothing wrong with debt, so long as it generates a positive return
Cube's theory of debt management:

1) The poor use debt to get poorer
2) The rich use debt to get richer
3) The very rich use other people's debt to get richer --> :twisted:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '2'). There is only a casual relationship between the price of oil and GDP growth. This may be why we have seen strong global growth in the past few years despite rising energy prices as well as commodities...
I've mentioned previously on this board that oil is still very cheap. If we take a look at how much "value" we get out of each barrel it's amazing. Take a look at the "value chain" from bottom to top here's an example:

oil --> petrochemicals --> plastics --> panty hose and toy action figures!

How much is a barrel worth? The world GDP is $65 Trillion and oil use is $31 Billion/yr. Therefore 1 barrel of oil generates $2,000 of economic output. (yes I know that's seriously shooting from the hip)

When we hit PO every barrel of oil that gets taken "offline" will equal $2,000 taken away from the world economy. This will be the greatest shock IMHO...not the rise in prices.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby matt21811 » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 18:10:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')When we hit PO every barrel of oil that gets taken "offline" will equal $2,000 taken away from the world economy.


Written like it's a fact.

Unfortunatley the graph that started this thread clearly shows the ratio of oil to dollars is not fixed.
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby cube » Tue 03 Jul 2007, 20:22:20

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('matt21811', '.')..
Written like it's a fact.

Unfortunatley the graph that started this thread clearly shows the ratio of oil to dollars is not fixed.
Nobody ever said GDP to oil consumption was an absolute fixed ratio....but obviously there is a correlation. Anybody here wish to make the claim the world can cut it's oil use in half but still retain he same GDP???.....I think NOT.

As mentioned before the USA increased it's energy efficiency by outsourcing the grunt work to China. What was the net efficiency gain if there even was one? That's why I suggested using world GDP to oil consumption. Granted there would still be wiggle room to play with the numbers but its not like you could outsource all the high energy manufacturing to some other planet. :-D
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby kmann » Wed 04 Jul 2007, 01:43:07

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')As mentioned before the USA increased it's energy efficiency by outsourcing the grunt work to China.


I see this statement frequently on these boards, but I have never seen it backed up with data or research. I think it is just accepted because it fits in nicely with the prevailing views around here. It needs to be backed up with proof. Anyone?
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Re: Oil Consumption vs GDP

Postby joewp » Wed 04 Jul 2007, 02:05:13

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('kmann', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('cube', '
')As mentioned before the USA increased it's energy efficiency by outsourcing the grunt work to China.


I see this statement frequently on these boards, but I have never seen it backed up with data or research. I think it is just accepted because it fits in nicely with the prevailing views around here. It needs to be backed up with proof. Anyone?


$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Daily Times', '
')China oil imports up sharply

BEIJING: China’s imports of crude oil jumped in January to May, driven by the country’s double-digit economic growth while growth in oil output almost stagnated in the period, state media said Tuesday.

Bolstered by its blistering economic growth, net imports of crude by the world’s second largest oil consumer rose 11.5 percent to 65.8 million tonnes in the five months, the China Securities Journal reported. However, the country’s own oil production during the period rose only marginally by 1.7 percent to 77.5 million tonnes, the newspaper said.

With domestic oil reserves drying up, China is having to look for energy resources overseas to fuel its voracious economy that expanded 10.7 percent last year, marking a fourth consecutive year of double-digit growth.


Oil imports up 11.5%, while economic growth up just ("just", hehe) 10.7 percent. Highly inefficient if you consider China all alone.

If you consider China as the US's manufacturing base, however, it appears the the so-called US's "efficiency" is really powered by oil consumption in China. How much of the US "GDP" is sales as Walmart and other retail establishments who are merely fronts for Chinese manufacturers?

Sorry I can't give you hard numbers, but I think the point is made.
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