In an exclusive interview for Energy Bulletin and MMNews, the economist James D. Hamilton gives his reading of the oil price spike in 2007-08 and what lies ahead of us. “Acknowledging honestly the size of the challenge is probably the most important first step.”
By Lars Schall
James D. Hamilton, born 1954, received his Ph.D. in Economics from the
His primary fields of teaching are macroeconomics, econometrics and energy economics. He has done extensive research on business cycles, monetary policy and oil shocks, and has frequently been a research adviser and visiting scholar with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve as well as individual Federal Reserve banks.
One of his research interests concerns oil price shocks and he discussed some of the issues of interest in testimony before the Joint Economic Committee of the United States Congress on May 20, 2009. His latest research paper on this topic is Causes and Consequences of the Oil Shock of 2007-08, which was presented at a conference at the Brookings Institution on April 2, 2009.
Mr. Hamilton is the author of Time Series Analysis (Princeton University Press, 1994), the leading text on forecasting and statistical analysis of dynamic economic relationships, and Advances in Markov-Switching Models (Physica-Verlag, 2002; co-edited with Baldev Raj). He published scientific papers and articles at Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, Journal of Monetary Economic, Macroeconomic Dynamics, Energy Journal.
Among his current working papers are:
Calling Recessions in Real Time,
Nonlinearities and the Macroeconomic Effects of Oil Prices,
The market-perceived monetary policy rule, co-authored with Seth Pruitt and Scott Borger,
Sources of Variation in Holding Returns for Fed Funds Futures Contracts, co-authored with Tatsuyoshi Okimoto.
The following exclusive interview is a Joint Venture between Energy Bulletin(www.energybulletin.net) in the
Mr. Hamilton, one of your research interests as an economist concerns the economic consequences of oil price shocks. What exactly is an oil price shock?
Traditionally these resulted from dramatic geopolitical events that substantially disrupted global oil supplies, such as the embargo by the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries in 1973, the dual disruptions of the Iranian revolution in 1978 and the Iran-Iraq war in 1980, and the first Persian Gulf war in 1990. However, in 2007-2008 the price of oil increased as much or more as in any of these previous episodes, in the absence of any major disruption in the supply. I believe that the most recent episode had similar consequences for the economies of the oil-consuming countries as the earlier oil shocks.
A good example how high oil prices can affect the economy in a negative way was the oil price spike of 2007/08. You have written on this topic a research paper entitled Causes and Consequences of the Oil Shock of 2007-08. What were the major factors contributing to the soaring oil price in your view?
Global oil production was basically stagnant between 2005 and 2008, while the world economy and demand for oil grew at a very rapid pace. For example, consumption of oil in
Can you give our readers clear evidence for the economic correlation between the tightening of oil / energy on the one side and the current financial crisis on the other?
The most dramatic episode in the financial crisis came after the failure of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. However, in the year leading up to this, many of the developments observed in the
One application of your research has been to determine via algorithms when economic recessions begin and end. Is there a limit of the oil price from which on it will become impossible to make growth and thereby a recovery happen?
I believe that the big macroeconomic effects that followed historical oil shocks resulted from recessionary feedback dynamics in which unemployed workers cut their spending on other products. But once we reach that condition, we’re in some ways insulated from an immediate repeat of the same process. For example,
You also focus on monetary issues. Is there a problem coming our way due to the apparent scarcity of the energy supply and the way our money system works? Are both things on a collision course with each other?
The basic issue is that consumers wanted oil that just wasn’t available-- the million barrels per day I mentioned above. The U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank can create lots of money, but do not have the power to produce a single barrel of oil. It is a mistake to think that a sufficiently clever monetary policy could solve the problem.
There is nevertheless a potential for destabilizing feedback here. As the oil-producing countries accumulated a dollar surplus, some of that money went back into investments that were really not too sound. Bernanke has referred to this as a “global savings glut”, while others have described it as investors “chasing yield.” Whatever you want to call it, this interacted with an over ambitious monetary policy to keep interest rates at excessively low levels over 2003-2005. The resulting poor investments again made a contribution to the financial crisis.
How could this collision course being ended? For example through energy vouchers? May I ask you to explain how such a system functions?
I believe we have come to expect too much for monetary policy, and would do better to simply acknowledge that the energy issues are not ones we can address with this tool. Unfortunately, I do not think there is any simple fix-- energy vouchers or any other-- for the looming challenges ahead in terms of energy. But acknowledging honestly the size of the challenge is probably the most important first step.
Do you see derivatives as a prime problem in the oil market today?
Again, I think it is most helpful to first look at the physical quantities of oil that are being produced and consumed. The underlying policy challenge here is a physical, not a financial matter.
Should the
Yes, I think there are a number of issues, including participation by pension funds, off-exchange speculation, margins, and counterparty and systemic risk on which regulatory oversight has been insufficient.
What drives the oil price right now? In
The international oil companies are far less important today than they were half a century ago. For example, ExxonMobil, the biggest, had 2.4 million barrels per day of liquids production in 2009, which is less than 3% of the 84 mbpd world total. Production today is in the control of sovereign countries like
And as for speculation, I would again have thought the focus should first be on financial speculators and possible physical accumulation by
Although perception such as you describe may be widespread, I am unaware of hard facts that one could point to in its support.
What are your thoughts related to what is happening in the
The companies here were trying to drill for oil through several miles of rock and under 5000 feet of water. While that is a pretty impressive feat of engineering, this tragedy drives home the reality that we have very little ability to control what happens in those circumstances or respond to problems. We are sometimes lulled by the apparent dazzling success of our technology in some arenas into forgetting or ignoring the many things that can and will go wrong.
Do you agree with Michael T. Klare that “more such disasters will follow” because “the ultimate source of the disaster is big oil’s compulsive drive to compensate for the decline in its conventional oil reserves by seeking supplies in inherently hazardous areas”?[i]
About a third of
Why is there in the
A third of
Would you support the implementation in the
I believe it makes more sense to tax the specific energy sources you want to discourage.
Thank you very much for taking your time, Mr. Hamilton!
SOURCES:
[i] compare Michael T. Klare: “The Oil Rush to Hell / The Relentless Pursuit of Extreme Energy. A New Oil Rush Endangers the Gulf of
[ii] compare Michael C. Ruppert: “Confronting Collapse. The Crisis of Energy and Money in a
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