World Bank Suggests OPEC Cartel will Dissolve
As OPEC ‘s refusal to curb oil production contributes
to a nine-month plunge in prices, a new paper suggests the group’s days may be
numbered.
OPEC, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, has
vowed to defend its market share against higher-cost producers such as U.S.
shale drillers and companies developing Canada’s oil sands. Its strategy hinges
on the odds that an extended period of low prices will lead other
producers to scale back output, enabling the group to reassert its
influence. OPEC supplies about 40 percent of the world’s crude.
Yet a brief history detailed by the World Bank Group
shows how difficult it can be to maintain a commodities cartel in the face
of market forces and technological advances.
Following World War II a number of agreements were struck to
govern trade in commodities including wheat, sugar, tin, coffee and olive oil,
according to the Washington-based development bank. Producing and consuming
nations often negotiated the deals to stabilize price levels. All of the
agreements eventually collapsed-with the notable exception of OPEC, which was
founded in 1960 and is led by Saudi Arabia.
Take tin. Once upon a time, people wrapped their leftovers in
it. Most beverage cans were made of it. Now that job falls primarily to
aluminium, a lighter metal that’s less susceptible to corrosion. According to
the World Bank, the rise of aluminium as a substitute was a driving factor
behind the collapse in 1985 of the tin cartel, which was formed in 1954.
Or look at natural rubber. Its three key producers -
Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand - formed a producer group in 1979. Rubber
prices, which are denominated in U.S. dollars, declined in the late 1990s due
to weak demand amid the fallout from the Asian financial crisis. The World Bank
notes this should have prompted production cuts, however the sharp devaluation
in the members’ currencies caused local prices of rubber to increase, leading producers
to expand output. The cartel collapsed in 1999.
And OPEC? The oil producers’ group was on full display during
the twin oil shocks of the 1970s, when oil prices spiked. But the entry of new
suppliers and squabbling between OPEC members eroded its influence over the
next two decades, according to the World Bank. “There’s very little evidence
that OPEC has been effective as a cartel for some time,” said Michael
Levi, senior fellow for energy and the environment at the Council on
Foreign Relations. “Saudi Arabia, once in a while, has stepped in to stabilize
the market.”