If Congress really cared about the economic well-being of American
citizens, it would stop fulminating against IOCs and reverse
current policies that discourage, indeed prohibit, the production
of domestic oil and natural gas. Even the announcement that
Congress was opening the way for domestic production would lead to
downward pressure on oil prices.
There is an historical precedent for such a step: Ronald
Reagan's deregulation of domestic crude oil prices at the beginning
of his first term. At the time, thanks to the decision by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) to curtail
output, the price of oil was at a level that in real terms is only
now being matched. Domestic price controls ensured that the OPEC
cartel would face little or no competition in the production of
oil.
Price controls were exacerbated by other wrongheaded policies
stimulated by the two "energy crises" of the 1970s. One of the most
egregious was the infamous "windfall profits" tax, designed to
punish oil companies for alleged profiteering. But since it applied
to even newly discovered oil, its main impact was to discourage the
exploration and drilling that would have increased oil supplies.
Although the energy problems of the 1970s were traceable to
government policies, Reagan's decision to deregulate oil prices was
ridiculed by policy makers, especially those who had served in the
previous administration. For instance, Frank Zarb, who had been
Jimmy Carter's "energy czar," predicted that decontrolling the
price of crude oil would lead to gasoline prices of $10 a gallon.
Instead, the world price of oil plummeted, helping to fuel the
extraordinary economic growth of the 1980s.
Reagan's deregulation of crude oil prices created incentives
for domestic producers to invest in exploration and to increase
production. The threat of increased output by non-OPEC producers
destroyed the discipline among OPEC members necessary to restrict
production to maintain high prices. Facing the likelihood that an
increase in supply would lead to lower future prices, OPEC
producers increased output in the hopes of maximizing profits
before prices fell. The cascading effect caused oil prices to
tumble.
As in the 1970s, U.S. energy policies have essentially
restricted the exploitation of domestic sources of energy.
Curtailed supplies have combined with rapid, world-wide
energy demand to increase the price of oil and other sources of
energy.
This provides leverage to foreign producers and threatens
U.S. energy security.
Freeing up domestic energy resources will do today what
President Reagan's decision to deregulate oil prices in 1981 did
then: cause oil prices to fall, thereby enhancing U.S. energy
security.
Mr. Owens is a professor at the Naval War College in Newport,
R.I., and editor of Orbis, the journal of the Foreign Policy
Research Institute in Philadelphia
http://royaldutchshellplc.com/2008/05/29/blame-congress-for-high-oil-prices/