OPEC: The Failing Giant

Front Cover
University Press of Kentucky, Oct 17, 2014 - Political Science - 272 pages

A glut of oil, dropping prices, the threat of insolvency, a divided membership—these developments in the early weeks of 1985 underline the cogency of Mohammed Ahrari's historical study of the OPEC oil cartel and his argument that economic forces, not politics, determine OPEC's action in the world arena.

The impetus for the formation of OPEC in 1960 was the desire of the oil-producing states for greater income from their most valuable resource. The international oil corporations had secured lucrative concessions early in this century, and in the 1960s they still dictated both the terms of production and the prices paid the oil states.

In the buyers' market of the 1960s, the organization found itself with little economic clout. But in the early 1970s, OPEC members succeeded not only in manipulating the price of crude oil but in reducing the status of the oil corporations to that of mere managers of upstream operations. In addition, they accumulated enormous numbers of petrodollars by exploiting increasingly tight markets in the aftermath of the oil embargo of 1973 and the Iranian revolution in 1979.

The effects of OPEC policies on the consuming countries have been skyrocketing inflation and sustained recession, with profound political repercussions. But the OPEC members have found their apparent power an uncertain blessing, as Mr. Ahrari demonstrates. Their failure to develop pricing formulas sensitive to fluctuations in the international oil market have made them highly vulnerable. In addition, the political tensions emanating from the Iran-Iraq war and from the specter of repetition of Iranian-style revolution elsewhere in the Persian Gulf have made OPEC's continued viability highly uncertain.

 

Contents

1 Introduction
1
2 The Uncertainties of the Buyers Market
15
3 The Making of the Sellers Market
32
4 The World on a Roller Coaster
57
5 The Oil Embargo
111
6 Toward an Uncertain Future
133
7 Epilogue
189
Statistical Tables
200
Glossary
207
Chronology of OilRelated Events 19601985
210
Notes
232
Index
251
Copyright

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About the author (2014)

Mohammed E. Ahrari is a member of the political science department at East Carolina University.

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