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TIME: Almanac of the 20th Century
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TIME, Almanac of the 20th Century.ISO
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1990
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90
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jul_sep
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0903106.000
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<text>
<title>
(Sep. 03, 1990) The Petro Panic
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
Sep. 03, 1990 Are We Ready For This?
The Gulf:Desert Shield
</history>
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<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
NATION, Page 49
The Petro Panic
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Fearing war and dreading an oil shock, the financial markets
sink into a frenzy of selling. For the U.S. economy, the
outlook is stagnant--at best.
</p>
<p>By George J. Church--Reported by Anne Constable/London,
Michael Duffy/Washington and Thomas McCarroll/New York
</p>
<p> Leftist radicals who think capitalism thrives on war must
have wondered what on earth to make of last week. The prospect
of combat in the Persian Gulf touched off something resembling
panic throughout the financial world. Stock prices sank rapidly
in New York City, Tokyo, London, Paris, Frankfurt. At the lows
on Thursday, shares of all U.S. stocks had lost more than $600
billion in paper value in slightly over a month, more than in
the Black Monday crash of October 1987; on the Tokyo exchange,
cumulative losses since the start of the year came to well over
$1 trillion. Bond prices dropped in sympathy, sending interest
rates spiraling; the yield on bellwether U.S. Treasury 30-year
bonds Thursday hit an extraordinary 9.13%, the highest since
April 1989. The dollar, which is losing its reputation as a
safe haven, fell hard against nearly all other major
currencies, touching a lowest ever rate of 1.54 against the
deutsche mark.
</p>
<p> On Friday markets generally steadied as traders and
investors began to suspect that the earlier nose dive had been
an overreaction: nothing so absolutely awful had happened yet.
In Manhattan the Dow Jones industrial average climbed 49 points
to a close of 2532.92--still down 112 points, or 4.2%, for
the week and more than 460 points, or 16%, below its July 16
high of just under 3000. But no one could be sure that the
worst was over. Some markets, notably bonds, kept right on
going down. More important, the threat of war has not begun to
fade, and the markets are operating on a frightening equation:
war equals oil shortages equals skyrocketing petroleum prices
equals an upsurge in general inflation plus sagging profits,
lower production and more unemployment--all at the same time.
J. Richard Fredericks, a banking analyst at Montgomery
Securities, a San Francisco brokerage, summarizes the thinking:
"The gulf crisis has fueled the fears of rising inflation,
deficits, recession and stagflation. That's a wicked
combination."
</p>
<p> Some of these worries might come true even without a war.
The price of crude oil for October delivery leaped to $32.35
per bbl. at one point last Thursday, the highest since futures
trading began in 1983, and closed Friday at $30.91, drastically
above the $18 spot price that prevailed only a month ago. The
worldwide embargo of Iraqi and Kuwaiti oil has removed about
4 million bbl. a day from international trade, and doubts are
growing that other producers can make up the shortfall. Some
experts are skeptical that Saudi Arabia can increase its
production of crude quite as much as the 2 million bbl. daily
it has promised. The Saudis notified customers last week that
there would be no increase at all in their deliveries of
refined products to the world market, since the gasoline and
jet fuel would be needed at home to supply Saudi and American
planes and tanks defending the oil wells against Iraqi forces.
</p>
<p> The results are likely to be especially severe in the U.S.,
which is uncomfortably vulnerable to any shock. Economists are
debating whether the economy is merely on the brink of a
recession or already in one. Output of goods and services grew
only 1.2% in the second quarter, the fifth straight quarter of
growth below 2%. That is likely to spark a continuing increase
in unemployment, which rose last month to 5.5%, the highest
since August 1988. Corporate profits have declined 12% in the
first half, and are likely to sink further, in part because
higher interest rates are making it more difficult for many
corporations to pay off their swollen debts. Consumers also are
too heavily in debt to increase their spending much.
</p>
<p> The public has turned increasingly pessimistic. In a
TIME/CNN poll taken last week by Yankelovich Clancy Shulman,
59% of the adults surveyed said they expect a recession, up
from 55% two weeks ago. The vast majority expect conditions to
deteriorate: 66% anticipate rising unemployment, 75% foresee
higher interest rates, and 86% believe inflation will increase.
They have good reason for gloom, beyond the tendency for such
fears to become self-fulfilling prophecies. Big oil-price
increases act like a stiff tax increase, pulling money out of
consumers' pockets and reducing their ability to buy other
products. A rule of thumb is that an annual increase of $8 per
bbl. in oil prices reduces economic growth 1 percentage point
a year. But petroleum has already risen more than that, and
subtracting a point from growth leaves almost nothing. So if
prices stay put, says a Bush Administration official, "growth
is going to be a giant goose egg for the year. A big fat zero."
</p>
<p> And that is an optimistic scenario. Continuing large price
boosts, especially if produced by a protracted war on the
Arabian Peninsula, could bring what a government official calls
a "deep, deep recession." Worse yet, it would be an
inflationary recession. Oil-price increases push up the cost
of not only gasoline and heating fuel but also everything else
made from petrochemicals: detergents, paint, ink, plastics and
anything packaged in them, to name only a few. Anthony
Vignola, chief economist of the Kidder Peabody brokerage firm,
figures that if the recent rise of crude oil to almost $32 per
bbl. is not rolled back, consumer prices this quarter will jump
at an annual rate of 8.6%, nearly double their recent pace.
</p>
<p> Worst of all, there seems to be little that government can
do to head off such trouble. The conventional remedy for
recession is deficit spending--but the budget deficit is so
swollen there is little room to pump it up further. The Federal
Reserve Board is in an especially impossible position. To ward
off or soften recession, the Fed would normally lower interest
rates; to combat inflation, it would raise them. To fight both
together, it should do--what? The conventional wisdom is
stumped for an answer. The time to move was much earlier: wise
policy could have reduced U.S. dependence on imported oil and
lowered the deficit during the prosperous years. By doing
neither, the nation made itself vulnerable to an outside shock;
it is all too likely to pay a stiff price now.
</p>
<p> Other industrialized countries are, on the whole, in better
shape than the U.S. to withstand an oil shock. Although their
dependence on imported oil generally, and Persian Gulf oil
specifically, is even greater, their economies for the most
part have been growing faster than that of the U.S., and thus
have more room to absorb some slackening.
</p>
<p> Nonetheless, they have their own difficulties. Though the
Japanese economy is still growing robustly, Japan shares U.S.
worries about rising inflation and interest rates. In addition,
real estate and stock prices by the end of last year had been
bid up to what the country's economists concede were ludicrous
and unsustainable heights. The stock market tailspin was
largely inevitable, whatever happened to oil, but it may now
have reached a scary point. Western analysts are worried, for
example, that Japanese banks invested heavily in real estate
loans that are going sour and industrial stocks that have
fallen sharply in price; consequently the banks may have to
reduce their lending to more productive enterprises. In
Frankfurt the stock market has been battered by heavy selling
of stocks (Daimler-Benz, Hoechst) that had previously been
heavily propped up by Kuwaiti investment.
</p>
<p> In Britain inflation had been expected to rise above 10%
this fall, and the economy seemed to be headed for recession
as well. No wonder, then, that the threat of war and further
big oil-price increases pulled the London stock market down
along with all others. Gerard Holtham, London-based chief
international economist for Shearson Lehman Hutton, figures
that the oil-price increases that have already occurred have
"clinched" a downturn for the U.S., Britain, Canada and
Australia. Says he: "If you speak English, you're in recession."
More generally, no nation is likely to be able to resist the
impact of an oil shortage and further price boosts.
</p>
<p> In the Third World such nations as Brazil and Chile may have
to default on debt repayments to their Western creditors. The
new democracies of Eastern Europe have had enough trouble
switching from Soviet oil at a subsidized $7 per bbl. to oil
bought on world markets at $18; a further leap to $32 or more
could severely disrupt their efforts to shift from command to
free-market economies. And the Western industrial world is so
thoroughly integrated that an inflationary recession in the
U.S. is certain to have a global impact.
</p>
<p> It is possible to foresee a different outcome. A prolonged
standoff in the gulf might be accompanied by a rise in crude
production by countries other than Iraq and Kuwait sufficient
to reverse some of the recent price run-ups. Even war could end
in a coup overthrowing Saddam Hussein, a quick American victory
and a vast easing of economic strains. But it would be risky
to bet on any such outcome. Last week's upheaval in the
financial markets might have been an overreaction to what has
happened so far, but unhappily it cannot be dismissed as
mindless panic. In a few months it could even look like a sober
reappraisal of darkening prospects for the world economy.
</p>
</body>
</article>
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