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- <text id=93HT1432>
- <title>
- Man of Year 1974: King Faisal
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--Man of the Year
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 6, 1975
- Man of the Year
- Faisal and Oil: Driving Toward a New World Order
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> In every car and tractor, in every tank and plane--oil.
- Behind almost every lighted glass tower, giant industrial plant
- or little workshop, computer and moon rocket and television
- signal--oil. Behind fertilizers, drugs, chemicals, synthetic
- textiles and thousands of other products--the same substance
- that until recently was taken for granted as a seemingly
- inexhaustible and obedient treasure. Few noted the considerable
- historic irony that the world's most advanced civilizations
- depended for this treasure on countries generally considered
- weak, compliant and disunited. Now all that has changed, and the
- result has been a major economic and political dislocation
- throughout the world.
- </p>
- <p> The change became dramatically apparent in 1974, a pivotal
- year that saw the decline of old powers, old alliances, old
- philosophies--and the rise of new ones. The West's belief in
- the inevitability of human progress and material growth was
- badly shaken as inflation spread oppressively across the world,
- several industrial societies tumbled into recession, and famine
- plagued a score of nations. There was a marked erosion in the
- wealth, might and cohesiveness of North America, Europe and
- Japan. In the developing world, 40 or more countries with few
- natural resources fell increasingly into destitution and
- dependency. Meanwhile, a handful of resource-rich nations
- gravely compounded the problems and challenged the vital
- interests of the rest of the world by skillfully wielding a most
- potent weapon: the power of oil.
- </p>
- <p>The Swiftest Transfer of Money in History
- </p>
- <p> United in history's most efficient cartel, these nations
- exploited modern civilization's dependence on oil. Their power
- came from the uniqueness of oil, an exhaustible and not quickly
- replaceable resource that has long been shamefully wasted by
- much of the world. Because oil is not usually found where it is
- most consumed, and demand for it is so great, it is the most
- widely traded commodity in world commerce as well as a highly
- volatile element in world politics.
- </p>
- <p> Again and again, the cartel formed by the Organization of
- Petroleum Exporting Countries raised the price of oil until it
- reached unprecedented and numbing heights. The producing
- nations' "take" from a barrel of oil, less than $1 at the start
- of the decade, was lifted from $1.99 before the Arab-Israeli war
- 15 months ago to $3.44 at the end of 1973 to more than $10 at
- the end of 1974. The result is the greatest and swiftest
- transfer of wealth in all history: the 13 OPEC countries earned
- $112 billion from the rest of the world last year. Because they
- could not begin to spend it all, they ran up a payments surplus
- of $60 billion. This sudden shift of money shook the whole
- fragile structure of the international financial system,
- severely weakened the already troubled economies of the
- oil-importing nations and gave great new political strength to
- the exporters.
- </p>
- <p> The beneficiaries of this transfer were a disparate group
- of oil-possessing Africans, Asians, Latin Americans and, most
- favored of all, Arabs, who provided two-thirds of the petroleum
- exports and have more than three-fifths of the proven petroleum
- reserves in the non-Communist world. One bleak, sparsely
- populated country is by far the world's greatest seller and
- reservoir of oil, and one dour, ascetic and shrewd man is its
- undisputed ruler. He was a principal factor in raising oil
- prices, and now holds more power than any other leader to lower
- them or raise them anew. He is completing arrangements to
- nationalize the vast U.S.-owned oil properties within his
- country, bringing an end to an era in which the international
- oil companies dominated the Persian Gulf and helped to transform
- its face and fortune. Both in his own right and as a symbol of
- the other newly powerful potentates of oil, Saudi Arabia's
- King Faisal is the Man of the Year.
- </p>
- <p>All the King's Spending and All the King's Plans
- </p>
- <p> Last year Faisal's Saudi Arabia earned $28.9 billion by
- selling nearly one-fifth of all the oil consumed by non-
- Communist countries. The King channeled part of these funds into
- a massive development program that aims at building factories,
- refineries, harbors, hospitals and schools for his 5.7 million
- people. Faisal also spent about $2 billion on modern weapons for
- his small but growing armed forces. He granted a large part of
- the $2.35 billion that the Arab oil producers pledged at Rabat
- to the "confrontation states" in the battle against Israel; last
- year he was the primary outside bank-roller of the Egyptians,
- Syrians, Jordanians and the Palestine Liberation Organization.
- He also made $1.2 billion in multilateral loans and grants and
- pledged to give some $200 million to poor countries outside the
- Arab world. But all the King's spending and all the King's plans
- could not come close to using up Saudi Arabia's wealth. The new
- financial giant of the world, Saudi Arabia in 1974 stood to
- accumulate a surplus of about $23 billion--a potentially
- unsettling force in global finance.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, Saudi Arabia's new wealth is simply the most
- spectacular symbol of the rising fortunes of the OPEC nations.
- With their surplus of some $60 billion last year, they took in
- $164 million more each day and $6.8 million more each hour than,
- by best estimates, they can currently spend. At that rate of
- accumulation, the Economist of London calculates, OPEC could buy
- out all companies on the world's major stock exchanges in
- 15.6 years (at present quotations), all companies on the New
- York Stock Exchange in 9.2 years, all central banks' gold (at
- $170 an ounce) in 3.2 years, all U.S. direct investments abroad
- in 1.8 years, all companies quoted on stock exchanges in
- Britain, France and West Germany in 1.7 years, all IBM stock in
- 143 days, all Exxon stock in 79 days, the Rockefeller family's
- wealth in six days and 14% of Germany's Daimler-Benz in two
- days (which in fact Kuwait did in November--though for that
- little country, the purchase represented all of 15 days of oil
- earnings).
- </p>
- <p> King Faisal is not merely the richest of the OPEC leaders.
- He is also a spiritual leader of the world's 600 million Moslems
- because his kingdom encompasses Islam's two holiest cities,
- Mecca and Medina. The King, who is 68, wants to pray within his
- lifetime in the third most holy city, in Jerusalem at the Dome
- of the Rock, and to walk there without setting foot on Israeli-
- held territory. (From which, according to Moslem legend, the
- prophet Mohammed ascended into heaven astride his favorite white
- steed, Buraq.) Unless and until he gets his wish, peace is
- unlikely to have much future in the Middle East. Faisal hates
- Zionism with a cold passion and often argues, despite the Soviet
- Union's pro-Arab, anti-Israel policies, that Zionists and
- Communists are allied to control the world.
- </p>
- <p> In 1974 Faisal used his political authority to aid
- Secretary of State Henry Kissinger in moving toward an interim
- agreement in the Middle East. He helped persuade the Syrians,
- for example, to agree to the disengagement pact with the
- Israelis on the Golan Heights. Acknowledging Faisal's role,
- Kissinger told TIME Correspondent Strobe Talbott: "The King is
- a sort of moral conscience for many Arab leaders. By having
- great religious stature, he can act as a kind of pure
- representative of Arab nationalism." And, Kissinger adds,
- "Faisal has been able to maneuver Saudi Arabia from being a
- conservative state into a political bellwether."
- </p>
- <p>The New Reality of Arab Power
- </p>
- <p> One of the causes of the West's woes is that for too long
- it underestimated the will and power of Faisal and other rulers
- of oil-producing nations to act together. The cries for higher
- prices had been rising for 15 years, first from the Venezuelans
- and Iranians, then from the radical Arab leaders of Libya,
- Algeria and Iraq. Faisal, a conservative and a longtime friend
- of the U.S., at first resisted--and then changed his mind
- because of U.S. political and military support of Israel.
- </p>
- <p> For many frustrating months in 1973, the King, and his
- spokesmen, warned the U.S. that unless it forced Israel to
- withdraw from occupied Arab territories and settle the
- Palestinians' grievances, he would slow down oil production. The
- State Department thought that the threat was hollow; President
- Nixon warned on television that the Arabs risked losing their
- oil markets if they tried to act too tough.
- </p>
- <p> The Arab-Israeli war of October 1973 moved the Arabs to
- impose a reduction in oil output--and do much more. Within
- ten days after the Egyptians and Syrians had attacked Israeli-
- occupied territory, the Arabs and Iranians in OPEC--long
- derided in the West for their disunity--coalesced and raised
- prices from $1.99 to $3.44 per bbl. (The members of OPEC, in
- order of last year's earnings are: Saudi Arabia, Iran,
- Venezuela, Nigeria, Libya, Kuwait, Iraq, United Arab Emirates,
- Algeria, Indonesia, Qatar, Ecuador and Gabon, which is an
- associate member. The United Arab Emirates is a federation of
- Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Sharjah, Ajman, Umm al Quwain, Ras
- al Khaimah and Fujairah.) A few days after that, King Faisal led
- an even stronger move. Angered by the U.S. military resupplying
- of Israel, the Saudis and the other Arabs embargoed all oil
- shipments to the U.S. and started cutting production. Very
- quickly their output dropped 28%. When the West made no
- response, OPEC realized its own strength and kept right on
- raising prices through 1974.
- </p>
- <p> This huge success gave new pride and political power to all
- the Arabs and brought King Faisal widespread respect in the
- Arab world, many of whose leaders had earlier scorned him as
- an unregenerate conservative. Suddenly the Arabs found
- themselves avidly courted by people who for long had
- condescended to them. The hotels of Riyadh, Dubai and Baghdad
- overflowed with Western businessmen hawking Idaho potatoes,
- cement plants, color television systems and gas-fired steel
- mills. The Middle East also became a magnet for Western bankers,
- each with his own creative plan for dispensing the Arabs' cash.
- Elite American universities, from Stanford to Chicago to
- Columbia, searched for Arab professors and added courses in
- Arabic history, culture, language, religion. Western governments
- vied with the Soviets over which side could sell the Arabs
- more--and more destructive--fighter jets, tanks and missiles.
- </p>
- <p> So much foreign money washed into Arab oil-producing
- countries that ordinary statistics no longer made sense.
- Estimated gross national product per capita ran to $13,000 in
- Kuwait, $14,000 in Qatar and more than $23,000 in Abu Dhabi.
- But those figures did not reflect living standards because the
- quick cash has not had time to filter down to the people.
- Bureaucracies strained to figure out ways to spend at home.
- Kuwait expanded one of the world's most all-encompassing welfare
- states. To hold down food prices, most of the big oil producers
- subsidized imports of staples. Office buildings, low-rent
- apartments and supermarkets rose almost everywhere. Some
- planners worried about keeping a work ethic going. Said a Saudi
- government minister: "We will have to be very careful not to
- spoil our citizens. Our people will have to deserve what they
- earn. We will furnish them with basic requirements, but nobody
- should live on charity."
- </p>
- <p> The Europeans and the Japanese, umbilically dependent on
- the Middle East for respectively 70% and 80% of their oil, not
- only pressed their most modern technology on the Arab states but
- also granted them strong diplomatic support. Some European
- political leaders called for a new Euro-Middle East alliance,
- perhaps to replace the Atlantic Alliance. The French, responding
- to what they call the "New Reality" of oil-based Arab power,
- were especially obsequious in their attentions. The Dutch, long
- outspoken defenders of Israel, fell silent in fear of Arab
- wrath.
- </p>
- <p>The Aim: A Redistribution of Wealth
- </p>
- <p> Indeed, the Arabs' ultimate weapon, oil, did much to change
- the entire balance of their conflict with Israel. Within the
- United Nations, a bloc of Arab, African, Latin American and
- Communist countries banded into a new majority, pushing through
- resolutions that isolated Israel and antagonized the U.S. Only
- the Dominican Republic and Bolivia voted with the U.S. and
- Israel when the General Assembly, by a margin of 105 to 4,
- invited the P.L.O.--with its long record of terrorism--to
- join in the debate over the Palestine issue. The U.N. welcomed
- P.L.O. Leader Yasser Arafat as a conquering hero and gave his
- organization permanent observer status.
- </p>
- <p> Next to Faisal, the ruler who gained most from oil last
- year was not an Arab but the "Light of the Aryans," the Shah of
- Iran. His country, the world's second largest oil exporter,
- quadrupled its petroleum earnings, to $20.9 billion. Impatient
- to industrialize and militarize, the Shah pressed the
- construction of automobile and petrochemical factories, dams and
- hospitals, and ordered 70 F-4 Phantom jets and 800 British
- Chieftain tanks to bolster a mighty armed force. This swelling
- strength raised apprehensions among some Arab governments in the
- region and evoked new hostility--but also won new respect in
- Washington, where Iran is valued as an anti-Communist bulwark.
- Though much poverty and illiteracy hang on in Iran, the middle
- class is rapidly spreading and the gross national product is
- expanding at an astounding rate of 50% a year. The Shah, who
- aims to turn Iran into "the Japan of West Asia," argued for
- price increases long before Faisal did, and he has been even
- more vocal than the Saudi King in urging that prices stay up.
- </p>
- <p> Several other countries rose on petropower. Oil made
- Nigeria not only black Africa's wealthiest nation ($9.2 billion
- in earnings) but unquestionably its strongest political force.
- Indonesia, though still abysmally poor, is showing the first
- glimmerings of its potential as Southeast Asia's economic
- leader, thanks to oil exports. Oil-endowed Venezuela at midyear
- trebled its national budget, to almost $10 billion, to take
- account of rising revenues. The Venezuelans are expanding their
- state-owned steel industry in the Orinoco backlands, paying to
- educate thousands of future leaders at U.S. universities and
- gaining great influence among Central American republics by
- promising them loans. Says Venezuela's President Carlos Andres
- Perez: "This is our opportunity to create a new international
- economic order."
- </p>
- <p> A new order is the ultimate goal of the petrocrats. Their
- aim is to lead many of the Third World nations in an economic
- revolution that is already bringing a radical redistribution
- of the world's wealth and political power. The transfer of
- riches to the oil producers has helped slow or stop the rise of
- living standards in many other countries--a development that
- has potentially grave social consequences. The steep economic
- growth that the industrial nations have enjoyed since World War
- II tended to soften social and economic inequalities because
- even the poor and deprived made visible progress year by year
- and could discern a brighter future. Now, if there is slow
- growth or no growth, demands for social justice will be more
- urgent--and harder to fulfill. Democratic governments will
- have to find ways to redistribute the existing wealth, or else
- face dissension and perhaps chaos.
- </p>
- <p> The Shah of Iran laid it on the line: "The era of terrific
- progress and even more terrific income and wealth based on
- cheap oil is finished." Henry Kissinger sees it another way. If
- high energy prices persist, he warns, "the great achievements
- of this generation in preserving our institutions and
- constructing an international order will be imperiled."
- </p>
- <p>Inflaming Problems and Inflating Prices
- </p>
- <p> The sudden, sharp rise in oil prices inflamed all sorts of
- problems, increasing government controls, intensifying
- nationalism and calling into question the future of free
- economies. People were gripped with the fear that events had
- overtaken their ability--or their government's ability--to
- cope. Otherwise sober men spoke of extreme solutions:
- repudiation of international debts, massive currency
- devaluations, the suspension of parliamentary government, even
- military intervention in the producing countries.
- </p>
- <p> It was possible to blame too much of this malaise on oil.
- Many countries have long suffered from high inflation because
- they were living beyond their means for years. Particularly in
- the West's mass-consumer societies, the poor wanted to live like
- the middle class, and the middle class wanted to live like the
- rich. Demands piled up--for more goods, fatter wages, higher
- social welfare--and prices soared. Still, by best estimates,
- the rise in energy prices caused one-quarter to one-third of
- the world's inflation last year. As the price of oil increased,
- it kicked up the prices of countless oil-based products,
- including fertilizers, petrochemicals and synthetic textiles.
- To battle inflation, all Western nations clamped on restrictive
- budget and credit policies, causing their economies to slow
- down simultaneously for the first time since the 1930s.
- </p>
- <p> The danger of a global recession grew because, as people
- spent more for oil, they had less money left over to spend on
- other things. The overall decline in demand reduced production
- and jobs. Because non-OPEC nations had to pay out so much for
- foreign oil, they moderated their buying of other imports; that
- slowed the growth of world trade, which has been a major source
- of international cooperation since World War II. The U.S.'s
- relations with its allies also came under strain, and the West
- seemed without will or unity. For most of the year, Western
- European nations and Japan refused to follow the U.S.'s call for
- a united front against the oil producers, essentially because
- European leaders considered the consumers' bargaining power too
- feeble.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. was a major oil exporter through the late 1950s,
- but then its own demands raced so far ahead of production that
- it now has to import more than one-third of its supply. The
- nation's bill for foreign oil pyramided from $3.9 billion in
- 1972 to $24 billion last year. (For comparison, 1972 is used
- because it was the last "normal" year before the embargo and the
- biggest increases.) The $20 billion jump meant that Americans
- either had to increase their foreign debts greatly or produce
- and export $20 billion more in goods and services--food,
- steel, planes, machinery, technology--to pay for oil imports.
- Unless the oil price comes down or the country sharply reduces
- its oil imports or substantially increases production, the U.S.
- will have to spend that extra $20 billion or more every year.
- This will drain off more of the nation's resources and build up
- trade debts that future generations will have to pay. In 1974
- the rippling effects of rising oil prices contributed three or
- four percentage points to the U.S. inflation rate of 12%. The
- oil rise, which Yale Economist Richard Cooper called "King
- Faisal's tax," reduced Americans' purchasing power and
- consumption of goods as much as a 10% increase in personal
- income taxes would have done.
- </p>
- <p> Nations that depend even more on OPEC fared much worse than
- the U.S. Japan's $18 billion bill for oil imports was the
- biggest single factor in lifting its inflation rate to a
- punishing 24%, causing the first real postwar decline in
- economic growth. Inflation rates doubled in many Western
- European nations: to 16% in France and Belgium, 18% in Britain,
- 25% in Italy. To meet its trade deficit, Italy has borrowed more
- than $13 billion, incurring interest payments of nearly $1
- billion a year. Prime Minister Harold Wilson says that the
- five-fold increase in oil prices aggravated Britain's worst
- economic crisis since the 1930s, and is severely testing the
- country's social and political fabric. Only West Germany, The
- Netherlands and Belgium ran trade surpluses.
- </p>
- <p> For Europeans, life became a little darker, slower,
- chillier. Heating-oil prices went up 60% to 100%, and
- thermostats were turned down. In the midst of a French
- conservation drive in October, President Valery Giscard
- d'Estaing found his Elysee Palace dining room so cold that he
- lunched with Premier Jacques Chirac in the library by a
- crackling fire. Gasoline rose to $1.40 per gal. in West Germany,
- $1.72 in Italy, $2.50 in Greece. Electrical advertising signs
- were banned after 10 p.m. in France and during the daytime in
- Britain. In Athens, the floodlights illuminating the
- Acropolis were turned off. Throughout Western Europe, energy
- costs were a cause of the slump in sales of autos, houses and
- electrical appliances. Layoffs spread in those and other
- industries. Unemployment hit a postwar high in France. In
- Germany, foreign workers were being paid bonuses to quit and
- go back home to Spain, Turkey and Yugoslavia.
- </p>
- <p> The Soviets benefited from what they accurately enough
- called this "crisis of capitalism." From their oil exports,
- mostly to the West but also to their East European allies, the
- Soviets earned $2 billion last year. However, Russia will
- rapidly scrape the limits of its self-sufficiency if it is to
- meet plans to expand its petrochemical industry and treble auto
- ownership (to 9 million cars) by 1980. Soon the Soviets will
- have to restrict oil sales and greatly increase in preferential
- prices that they charge to their Comecon partners. Last year
- Poland reportedly had to buy a large amount of Libyan crude, at
- $16 to $20 per bbl. Strapped for hard currency to pay for oil
- from non-Communist sources, East Germany had to restrict the
- expansion of its plastics and textiles industries.
- </p>
- <p> The poorest countries of Africa, Asia and Latin America
- were the worst hurt victims of the oil squeeze. Indeed, the
- developing countries' extra costs for oil last year totaled $10
- billion, wiping out most of their foreign aid income of $11.4
- billion from the industrialized world. In black Africa, only
- Nigeria has any big known reserves of oil, and Gabon, the Congo
- Republic and Angola possess some oil. For the other black
- African countries, the petrobill came to $1.3 billion last year.
- Development plans were stymied because so much money was drained
- off for oil. Drought-induced hunger became worse, in part
- because those countries could no longer afford as much gasoline
- to run their tractors, or fertilizers to nourish their fields.
- Inflation raced at rates averaging 45%.
- </p>
- <p> India suffered more than any other nation. Its oil import
- costs hit $1.6 billion, up fivefold in two years, leaving it
- little money to import food and fertilizer, machines and
- medicine for its hungering millions. Pakistan's plight was
- almost as critical; its imports of oil and fertilizer topped
- $355 million. Sri Lanka's rice farmers had to pay 375% more for
- fertilizer; they reduced their buying so much that the rice
- harvest fell almost 40% below expectations.
- </p>
- <p> The poorest countries--those with scant resources to
- finance their needed imports--descended into a new category,
- now known as the Fourth World. The old Third World became a more
- exclusive, OPEC-led grouping, limited to those nations that are
- exploiting their rich mineral or agricultural resources.
- Emboldened by the oil producers' success, many other Third World
- countries tried to create their own price-fixing cartels for
- copper, iron ore, tin, phosphates, rubber, coffee, cocoa, pepper
- and bananas. The leaders talked of "one, two, many OPECs." The
- grand plans generally failed because members have lacked the
- cohesiveness to make them work--so far. But the new importance
- of raw materials moved some big producers to raise prices
- unilaterally. Jamaica, for example, abrogated contracts with
- companies and lifted the government take for the country's
- bauxite by 700%.
- </p>
- <p> In sum, the world has entered an era in which natural
- resources will count for much more than before, conservation
- will gain a premium over consumption, and more attention will be
- paid to exploiting resources than curbing pollution. All this
- will bring many changes in life-styles: slower gains in real
- purchasing power, stricter controls on energy use, smaller cars.
- It remains to be seen to what extent the changes will be
- accepted by such disparate forces as labor unions, auto
- manufacturers, and consumer and environmental groups.
- </p>
- <p>The Case For--and Against--Increases
- </p>
- <p> With passion, the oil producers defend their price
- increases on the grounds that it is high time that the producers
- of raw materials get a fair shake from the richer industrial
- nations. Essentially, these are the oil producers' arguments:
- </p>
- <p> In the past, the industrial countries grossly exploited the
- oil-producing countries. For too long, the terms of trade were
- stacked against the materials producers. While they were forced
- to pay ever inflating prices for their machines, medicines,
- food and other goods bought from the West, the developed
- countries not only imported oil at low, stable prices but also
- built industrial and consumer booms on it. Now the oil producers
- must build their own industries, both to get a more equitable
- share of the world's income and to insure themselves against the
- day when their petroleum resources run out. Furthermore, by
- keeping prices high, the producers are really doing the rest of
- the world a favor by forcing both energy conservation and the
- search for alternative resources.
- </p>
- <p> The rise in oil prices, the producers go on, should not get
- all or even most of the blame for inflation, slow growth and
- balance of payments problems, which have deeper roots. Says
- Kuwait Oil Minister Abdel Rahman Atiqi: "Why should we be
- responsible for helping the U.S., for instance, solve its
- economic problems? When our Arab lands were impoverished and our
- oil was being sold at giveaway prices, what assistance did the
- U.S. give us?"
- </p>
- <p> The producers are not at all defensive about acting as a
- cartel. They contend that they learned all about cartels from
- the large Western oil companies, which for decades acted in
- concert and kept prices low. Cartels, in short, are neither
- unique nor forbidden by any international law. If buyers really
- want to moderate prices, say the producers, they should limit
- the international oil companies' "obscene" profits or lower
- their own taxes on oil products (taxes account for about 25% of
- the price of gasoline in the U.S. and 54% in France).
- </p>
- <p> On one level, it is impossible to quarrel with the producers
- for trying to get the most out of their resources and charging
- as much as they think they can get. But the producers often go
- far beyond the usual economic considerations of supply and
- demand, basing much of their case on fairness of prices, profits
- and shares of the world's wealth. Arguments about fairness are
- tricky, of course, and cut both ways. Surely other nations would
- be enraged if, for example, the U.S., Canada, Australia and
- France formed an Organization of Grain Exporting Countries
- (OGEC) and decreed a fivefold increase in the price of wheat, of
- which they are the major world suppliers. True, U.S. wheat
- prices jumped 192% in the two years up to last November, but
- that was a free-market surge caused largely by disastrous crop
- failures around the world during a period of rising demand. In
- the same two-year period, OPEC's major imports have risen much
- less: for example, cement 27%, heavy trucks, 25%.
- </p>
- <p> The OPEC nations cannot accurately argue--either in terms
- of economics or "fairness"--that the sharp rise to $10.12 per
- bbl. is needed to make up for the recent inflation in the price
- of goods that they buy in world trade. John Lichtblau, a leading
- U.S. oil consultant, notes: "Since 1960, the U.N. index of world
- export prices of manufactured goods has risen 86% and the Saudi
- government's revenue on each barrel of oil has risen 1,136%.
- Since 1970, world export prices have risen 55% and the OPEC
- governments' income on each barrel has gone up 955%."
- </p>
- <p> The high prices will certainly discourage oil waste, but
- the producers have an exaggerated fear that they will soon run
- out of what the Shah calls "this noble product." The Middle
- East's proven reserves have risen every year since records were
- kept and have doubled since 1959, to some 350 billion bbl. Saudi
- Arabia alone has proven reserves of 132 billion bbl.--enough
- to keep producing at current rates until the year 2018--and
- some experts reckon that the real total could be four times as
- great.
- </p>
- <p> Nobody knows what would be a "fair" oil price, but logically
- it should bear some relation to the cost of primary production.
- That cost ranges downward from $2.50 or so per bbl. in the U.S.
- to $.60 in Venezuela and $.12 in Saudi Arabia. The price should
- also have some market relationship to the price of alternative
- energy sources, which many authorities think would be
- economically feasible when oil sells at $7 or more per bbl. But
- with the latest round of oil price increases last month, the
- OPEC governments will collect $10.12 on a barrel. By contrast,
- the international companies earn $.20 to $.50 per bbl. in return
- for all the work, risk and investment that they undertook to
- find and pump that oil.
- </p>
- <p> Thus, instead of the elusive terms of fairness, the
- argument is perhaps best coached in terms of ultimate self-
- interest. The oil producers may well be setting a dangerous
- precedent, for themselves as well as oil users. By exercising
- monopoly muscle as a group of nations, the cartel may be
- creating a world in which prices are neither fair nor free but
- fixed by raw economic power. Considering the fact that oil is
- about all they have to bargain with, that kind of world could
- eventually be dangerous for OPEC's members. The oil producers
- quite frankly say that they expect the living standards of
- Western industrial countries to grow at a slower rate for the
- immediate future, and they cannot be expected to weep over that.
- But by forcing the change so suddenly, without giving the oil
- importers a chance to adjust gradually, OPEC runs the risk of
- wrecking the world economy--and that, OPEC spokesmen
- themselves have admitted, could only hurt them.
- </p>
- <p>The Companies' Rich Past and Questionable Future
- </p>
- <p> In all this, the role of the oil companies is growing
- weaker. The companies not only discovered and developed the oil
- but also put up billions of dollars to build rigs, pipelines,
- refineries and harbors. They have done so for more than 40
- years, since long before the Saudis had much interest in oil,
- let alone the means to exploit it. The first prospectors--from
- Standard Oil of California--went to Saudi Arabia in 1933 and
- brought in the first well in 1938. They and later prospectors
- had a rugged frontier existence, living in tents and huts,
- relying on an 11,000-mile-long logistics line from the U.S., and
- coping with desert sand, burning heat and loneliness. In the
- late 1930s and early 1940s, they were joined by Exxon, Texaco
- and Mobil to form the Arabian American Oil Co. Oil prices were
- relatively low--$1.40 to $2 and the governments' take ranged
- from $.20 to less than $1 a bbl.--because Middle East
- production costs were modest, oil was in surplus in the world,
- and the producers' governments were weak and disunited. Company
- earnings were huge. When supplies tightened and producers began
- to get together in the late 1960s, the governments' split of
- production profits rose from 50-50 to 67-33. Even before the
- price rises since 1973, Middle East governments profited nicely
- from oil; Saudi Arabia's take from 1965 to 1972 totaled $10
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> The OPEC countries have shrewdly turned the companies into
- scapegoats, blaming their high profits for the high retail
- prices. Indeed, in this year's first nine months, profits of the
- five biggest U.S. international oil companies jumped anywhere
- from 38% to 70%. But much of this gain was due to an unusual
- circumstance: OPEC's price rises triggered an automatic increase
- in the value of the huge stocks of oil that the companies held
- in tank farms and on tankers. The companies will not get those
- one-shot "inventory profits" in the future, unless OPEC again
- raises the price. As for relative earnings, the five companies'
- profits rose from $5.3 billion in the twelve months before the
- embargo and the big price rises, to a steep $8.2 billion in the
- twelve months following; but the OPEC governments' revenues
- swelled from $22.7 billion in 1973 to $112 billion last year.
- The companies' earnings will probably decline this year because
- their costs are going up while oil demand is going down.
- </p>
- <p>The Danger of Rising Surpluses
- </p>
- <p> The companies, in fact, were among the biggest losers of
- 1974. The four U.S. partners in Aramco had to agree late in the
- year to sell their remaining 40% ownership to Faisal's
- government. It will pay the partners $2 billion for almost all
- their facilities, a price that the Saudis can meet with less
- than one month's oil earnings. The Saudi takeover will move
- Kuwait, Qatar, Oman and the United Arab Emirates to nationalize
- the last of the Western oil operations in those areas, probably
- this year. The companies will become mere agents, selling
- technical and marketing services to the governments for a fee.
- </p>
- <p> The major companies' future is uncertain as they will face
- competition for markets from the oil countries' state-owned
- companies. Some national producers want to squeeze the private
- oil companies because they are viewed as competitors. Mani Said
- Utaiba, Petroleum Minister of the United Arab Emirates,
- complained: "These profits are being used by [the companies] to
- find alternative sources for our oil. They are investing on a
- huge scale in the Arctic and the North Sea. This we will not
- accept."
- </p>
- <p> The oil crisis promises to shake the world for at least
- another five years or longer. It will take that long for
- importing countries to develop alternative energy sources and
- more petroleum in nations outside OPEC. Oil will be flowing in
- from Alaska by 1978, but the total--600,000 bbl. a day at
- first, 2 millon bbl. a day by 1981--will not free the U.S.
- from the need for foreign supplies. Britain and Norway are each
- expected to be pumping 2 million bbl. a day from deep below the
- North Sea by the early 1980s. But the rest of Europe, as well
- as Japan and the Fourth World, will still depend on Middle East
- oil, above all from the country that has the most of it: Saudi
- Arabia.
- </p>
- <p> Moreover, if Faisal and his allies hold prices up, the rest
- of the world could encounter such compounded problems that 1974
- would be remembered as an easy year. With oil at $10 a bbl.,
- OPEC would change the world another $600 billion in the next
- five years. To pay the bill, the 137 nations outside the cartel
- would have to deliver one-quarter of their total exports to
- OPEC's elite 13 countries. It would be impossible for the oil
- importers to transfer so much of their production--or for OPEC
- nations to absorb it all. The most frightening figure for the
- future is that OPEC nations stand to accumulate payments
- surpluses of $250 billion to $325 billion by 1980, and the rest
- of the world would run up exactly that much of a deficit. (By
- contrast, West Germany now has the world's highest accumulated
- surplus, $36 billion. It will be surpassed this year by Saudi
- Arabia. The highest surplus ever accumulated by the U.S. was $26
- billion in 1949; the total for the U.S. now is $16 billion.)
- For the countries that have them, surpluses create huge
- purchasing--and political--power. Conversely, deficits
- usually lead to recessions, devaluations and decline.
- </p>
- <p> Both the surpluses and the deficits will drop when the
- OPEC countries expand their buying, lending and investing
- abroad. In stepping up their domestic development plans, they
- will have to enlarge their imports. This can be accomplished
- fairly easily by several of the OPEC members: Iran, Venezuela,
- Indonesia, Iraq, Nigeria, Algeria and Ecuador. They have
- relatively big populations and much poverty--hence much need
- for internal development. The huge problem is that six other,
- lightly populated Arab states--Saudi Arabia, Libya, Kuwait,
- Abu Dhabi, Dubai and Qatar--are collecting far more money than
- they can possibly spend. These six, embracing only 9.3 million
- people, earned $54.7 billion from oil last year. For all their
- industrialization and social welfare, their military and
- foreign aid, they can dispose of only a fraction of that total,
- leaving a combined surplus of $38 billion.
- </p>
- <p> Naturally, the Saudis are piling up the biggest surpluses.
- At present prices and production levels, they will collect a
- staggering $150 billion over the next five years. But they will
- be unable to buy or build fast enough to use up even one-third
- of their oil money on domestic development. By 1980, they stand
- to have well over $100 billion in surplus--to lend, give away
- or invest in foreign countries.
- </p>
- <p>The Search for Ways to Recycle
- </p>
- <p> In the chancelleries and countinghouses, everybody is
- seeking ways for the OPEC countries to lend their surpluses back
- to the oil importers in a massive "recycling." A hypothetical
- example of recycling: Italy pays several billions of dollars
- to Aramco, the marketing agent, for Saudi Arabian oil; Aramco
- then pays this money to Saudi Arabia, which in turn deposits
- it in Western banks; the banks then lend it back to the
- government of Italy. Trouble is, the petrodollar deposits are
- short-term (the oil countries want the power to pull their money
- out at a moment's notice), while most loans, to be useful to a
- government or business, must be for the longer term--anywhere
- from one to ten years. A further difficulty is that many of the
- big borrowers are chancy credit risks, including the governments
- of Italy, Denmark and the developing countries. More and more
- bankers fear that their institutions will go under if the OPEC
- depositors withdraw their money or the borrowers default on
- their loans. Since much of the hot oil money is deposited in
- U.S. banks, the U.S. Government would have to pay off to cover
- the defaults.
- </p>
- <p> Prudent bankers are increasingly refusing to lend a
- deficit-ridden country money that it may not pay back or to
- finance imports that it cannot afford. Quite a few banks are
- also turning down deposits of OPEC petrodollars or offering
- lower-than-usual interest rates. According to most estimates,
- big private banks in the West will be able to handle little more
- than 20% of recycling requirements in the future. New
- international agencies will have to be set up to do the job.
- </p>
- <p> Whoever controls these agencies will gain awesome political
- powers--and take on major financial risks. The lenders will
- be able to tell the borrowing nations that, if they want money,
- they must change certain economic policies, and perhaps some
- military and diplomatic policies as well. But the lenders will
- also carry the enormous risks of suffering loan defaults. Nobody
- minds having the political powers that go with lending, but
- nobody wants the risks.
- </p>
- <p> To help in recycling, Henry Kissinger has called for the
- Western countries and Japan to form a pool of $25 billion this
- year and perhaps another $25 billion next year. They would draw
- the money from petrodollar deposits in their banks and lend it
- out to industrial countries that have financial emergencies. For
- example, if a big oil producer pulled all of its money out of
- sterling, the British could get an immediate loan from the pool
- to cover their currency loss. Some Common Market nations,
- particularly West Germany, are cool to the Kissinger plan
- because they and the U.S. would be left holding the bag for any
- loan defaults.
- </p>
- <p> OPEC countries dislike international recycling plans that
- deny them a major voice in determining who could borrow their
- money. The Trilateral Commission, an influential group of North
- American, European and Japanese business executives and
- academicians, has proposed that the industrial countries and the
- oil producers jointly open and operate a bank for recycling. The
- two sides would put up equal amounts of money and decide who
- could borrow it.
- </p>
- <p> While this and other plans to start a joint fund for
- recycling hold much promise, one long-lasting problem is that
- recycling is really a euphemism for indebtedness, and interest
- payments must find their way back to the oil countries. In the
- 1980s some OPEC members may be earning as much from interest on
- their loans and bank deposits as from oil. This added wealth
- would give them more flexibility to reduce oil production if
- they want to conserve their liquid gold or to punish importers
- by reductions for political reasons. Meanwhile, to pay the
- interest, the borrowers may have to print more and more money,
- fueling inflation.
- </p>
- <p>Conserving to Crack the Cartel
- </p>
- <p> Thus, even with the best of recycling, the importing
- nations will be vulnerable. Says Walter Levy, the world's
- leading oil consultant: "The world economy cannot survive in a
- healthy or remotely healthy condition if cartel pricing and
- actual or threatened supply restraints of oil continue." In many
- ways, Western democracies face a wartime-like crisis, but until
- lately they have reacted as they did during the 1939-40 "phony
- war." Only by cooperating among themselves can the importers
- counter the cartel's control over their destinies. Recently they
- have begun to make tentative moves to accomplish three necessary
- things: conserve energy, develop new sources and stockpile
- oil in case of another embargo or cutback.
- </p>
- <p> In November, ministers from the U.S., Canada, Japan, all
- members of the Common Market (except France), four other
- European nations and Turkey signed an agreement to form the
- International Energy Agency, which Henry Kissinger had proposed.
- Provided their legislatures approve, each member would build up
- a stockpile of oil equal to 90 days of imports; if any OPEC
- members embargo oil or reduce shipments, the IEA nations would
- reduce consumption and later share what they have with one
- another. The IEA agreement will soon come up before Congress,
- which would do well to approve it.
- </p>
- <p> The Western nations will have no real bargaining strength
- until they show that they are taking strong measures to
- conserve. By significantly reducing demand, the big buyers of
- oil might force OPEC into production cuts that some cartel
- members may eventually find intolerable. Cutbacks would be
- particularly rough for Iran and Iraq, both of which plan
- substantial production increases in the next few years to
- finance their grand development programs. Rather than reduce
- output, other populous countries with ambitious development
- schemes--Nigeria, Venezuela, Indonesia--might be tempted
- to buck the cartel by selling below the fixed price. Ecuador,
- which badly needs development money, is already in some trouble.
- High prices have cut demand for its oil by one-third since 1973.
- </p>
- <p> At very best, however, the State Department reckons that
- OPEC would not break up for another two to four years--and
- probably not even then. It has not been at all damaged by a
- world oil surplus of one to two million bbl. a day, which has
- shown up because high prices reduced consumption last year. In
- the non-Communist world, consumption fell from 48 million bbl.
- a day in 1973 to 46.5 million bbl. last year; in the U.S., it
- declined from 17 million bbl. to 16.2 million bbl. Partly in
- response, OPEC is now producing at 20% below capacity with no
- visible problems. Again, it is Saudi Arabia that holds the key.
- The country has accumulated so much money that it could stop
- production for two or three years and still have more than
- enough cash to import food, provide free medical care and
- education, finance new industry and subsidize other Arab
- nations. But unless and until the industrial nations get
- together, much of the non-Communist world could not long
- function without Saudi Arabia's 8.5 million bbl. per day. As
- Saudi Arabia's Harvard-educated Oil Minister Ahmed Zaki Yamani
- told TIME Correspondent Karsten Prager: "How much can the
- consumers reduce consumption? By 10%? And how much can the
- producers reduce without financial pain? By at least 33%--minimally.
- The people who ask for a price reduction of $2 to
- $4 are simply not being realistic."
- </p>
- <p> Even so, the consumers must conserve to show OPEC that they
- are serious and to hold down their payments to the cartel.
- Kissinger has urged that they hold their oil imports essentially
- flat over the next decade. For the U.S., that would mean a
- decline in the annual rate of increase in energy from 4.3% in
- the past ten years to 2% or 3% in the next decade. The
- Trilateral Commission has called for limiting the annual growth
- in energy use during that period to 2% in the U.S. and Canada,
- 3% in Western Europe and 4% in Japan. Certainly the U.S. can and
- must lead the way by making the severest cuts because it wastes
- so much energy. A nation that has one-twentieth of the world's
- population should not expect to go on burning one-third of the
- world's oil.
- </p>
- <p> Through taxes and other mandatory measures, the U.S. could
- switch from profligacy to a new conservation ethic. The remedies
- are well known. Much energy could be saved by increasing federal
- taxes on gasoline, clamping a steeply graduated tax on heavy,
- thirsty cars, pumping many more millions into mass transit, and
- granting tax credits for purchases of building insulation. In
- addition, the U.S. could and should expand its domestic supplies
- of energy by increasing the capacity of the Alaska pipeline,
- opening the Navy's petroleum reserves in California and Alaska,
- encouraging offshore drilling, liberalizing controls on the
- strip-mining of coal (but adding guarantees that the lands would
- be reclaimed) and allowing natural gas prices to double or more.
- </p>
- <p>The Perils of Military Intervention
- </p>
- <p> Beyond conserving energy and recycling OPEC's money, the
- oil importers have no feasible weapons against the cartel. A
- trade war against OPEC would fail. If the U.S., for example,
- embargoed its shipments of food or machines to the oil
- producers, the Soviet Union and other countries would be eager
- and able to fill the gap.
- </p>
- <p> Military intervention could be extremely risky. There is
- always the danger that the Soviets would step in on the side of
- the Arabs--or extract a high political price from the West
- for staying out. Pipelines might be vulnerable to sabotage,
- though captured oilfields could be fairly easily protected. In
- any event, U.S. authorities condemn the wave of fantasizing
- about oil wars as "highly irresponsible." Military intervention,
- says a Washington policymaker, would be considered "only as
- absolutely a last resort to prevent the collapse of the
- industrialized world and not just to get the oil price down."
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. would be forced to use its "military option,"
- however, in the case of any clear and immediate danger that
- Saudi oil would fall into hostile hands. There is concern in
- Washington that in several years an extremist force might try
- to grab control. Faisal still has no shortage of enemies and
- covetous neighbors. At some future date, he--or his
- successor--may be motivated to relax prices in return for U.S. support
- to preserve the Saudi regime against a radical threat. He has
- no reason to do so now, although time and again last year Yamani
- proclaimed that Saudi Arabia was struggling to reduce prices to
- help the West but was blocked by Iran and other hawks within
- OPEC. Yamani lost much of his credibility among U.S. and
- European leaders when Saudi Arabia in August canceled an oil
- auction that might have brought lower prices and in November
- led the latest price rise. Says a U.S. official who has dealt
- with the Saudis: "Faisal does not want to bring down prices now
- and throw away his bargaining power for a settlement with
- Israel."
- </p>
- <p> A settlement with Israel would not itself lead to a price
- reduction. The non-Arab nations--Iran, Venezuela, Nigeria,
- Indonesia--though not part of the conflict, still want to
- maintain or increase prices. Yet marked progress toward peace
- in terms acceptable to the Arabs is absolutely essential before
- prices can soften; the Arabs will insist on that.
- </p>
- <p> On the other hand, if war erupts anew, the Arabs might
- embargo either the U.S. or all Western nations. Says Saudi
- Interior Minister Prince Fahd, 53, who is Faisal's brother and
- likely successor: "We would hate to impose another embargo. But
- in a war, when you feel you are in danger of dying, you may do
- anything. If war breaks out again, it will be not only the Arabs
- and Israelis who are damaged, but the world as a whole." If
- Western Europe were embargoed now, it would draw down its
- stockpiles (good for 60 days or more in each country), buy oil
- from non-Arab countries and probably go to immediate rationing.
- It might well hold out for six months without serious
- discomfort. Quite probably, however, Europe and Japan would put
- extreme pressure on the U.S. to halt military aid to Israel.
- Or, if threatened by complete economic breakdown and perhaps
- social upheaval, some Western nation or nations might intervene
- in Middle East oil lands. In any case, there is virtual
- consensus among Western policy-makers that Israel must give up
- almost all of its 1967 conquests and accept a homeland for the
- Palestinians. Otherwise, wars are likely to continue, and Israel
- cannot win the last round against 120 million Arabs enriched and
- armed by oil money.
- </p>
- <p>The Only Alternative: Interdependence
- </p>
- <p> One ray of hope in the oil crisis is that the two sides at
- least will begin to talk with each other in 1975. The Middle
- East producers have long called for a summit meeting with the
- oil importers from the West and the developing world. The French
- have strongly favored a conference. Kissinger has held out for
- a delay until the consumers are more firmly united, fearing that
- countries that are deeply in debt and heavily dependent on oil
- imports would easily bend to OPEC's bidding. At Martinique three
- weeks ago, President Ford and French President Valery Giscard
- d'Estaing struck a compromise calling for a series of meetings:
- first a general feeling-out between OPEC and the consumers, then
- a number of meetings among consumers to work out their common
- position, and finally a tripartite summit, probably this autumn.
- </p>
- <p> At that summit, OPEC leaders want to discuss not only oil
- but also the prices of other products. They aim to get an
- "indexing" agreement under which their oil prices would go up
- from the already high base as the prices of their own imports
- rise. Says Kissinger: "The best thing that can happen next
- year--and in fact I think the best will happen--would be that we
- would achieve consumer solidarity and then have a conference
- with the producers. That, together with energetic conservation
- measures and energetic development of alternative resources, may
- lead perhaps to a lowering of the oil price in return for long-
- term stability of the price. And at a lower price level, we
- would be prepared to consider indexing."
- </p>
- <p> A most positive step would be for oil producers and
- consumers to seek common and reciprocal interest going far
- beyond energy. The producers should be give greater
- responsibilities and more high offices in international
- councils. For example, they should get far more than the 5% of
- the voting strength that they now have in the World Bank and the
- International Monetary Fund. This would give them a larger voice
- in setting international monetary policies, which they deserve,
- and would also oblige them to put up quite a bit more than the
- 5% that they now give to underwrite those groups. The producers
- have been increasing their foreign aid fairly rapidly, but they
- probably should give much more in grants, low-interest loans and
- concessionary prices to the neediest countries. Last year OPEC
- members made aid commitments totaling $9.6 billion and actually
- disbursed $2.6 billion in gifts, concessionary loans and other
- aid--roughly half of it to Egypt, Syria and Jordan.
- </p>
- <p> Whatever devices are created to put OPEC capital to work
- in the rest of the world, the Western countries should help the
- oil producers build up their own agriculture and industries.
- Faisal notes, for example, that his rich country badly needs
- industrialization. To help prepare the producers for the day,
- however distant, when their oil runs out, the West should also
- join them in developing alternative forms of energy and should
- send technology and experts to OPEC countries. Fast development
- is inevitable in the oil countries, and it will help work off
- their surpluses by spurring their imports. For their part, OPEC
- members may lend or invest some of the huge sums of capital that
- oil importers will need to develop energy supplies from the
- atom, from shale and sands and, probably many years from now,
- from the sun and wind.
- </p>
- <p> In the difficult decade ahead, the best hope is that all
- sides will realize that they are really interdependent--for
- resources, technologies, goods, capital, ideas. The old world
- of Western dominance is dead, but if the oil powers try to
- dominate the new world of interdependencies, the result will
- be bankruptcies and deflation in the West, and even worse
- poverty and hunger in the have-not developing countries.
- </p>
- <p> The oil producers, who talk a great deal about past
- exploitation and their future aspirations, might consider the
- implications for themselves of the havoc that their monopoly
- pricing is causing the rest of humankind. The oil consumers, who
- are the victims of that upheaval, would do well to ponder with
- more sympathy the OPEC countries' deeply felt desire for a
- larger share of the world's wealth. In this great global clash
- of interests, it is time for both sides to soften their anger
- and seek new ways to get along with each other. If sanity is to
- prevail, the guiding policy must be not confrontation but
- cooperation and conservation.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-