1) Oil production grows very
slowly or plateaus.
This is the
baseline scenario that Kumhof and
Muir use. They assume that oil
grows by about 1 percentage point
less each year than its historical
average. So, let’s say, oil grows at a
steady 0.8 per cent per year rather
than the 1.8 per cent annual average
between 1981 and 2005. This isn’t a
temporary oil disruption like the one
we saw in 2008. It’s a persistent,
long-term supply shock.
What would happen? Oil prices,
the IMF model suggests, would
gradually double in 10 years and
quadruple over 20 years. Regions
that import oil on net, such as
Europe and the United States, would
see a small hit to growth – about
0.2 to 0.4 percentage points each
year. Countries that export, like
Saudi Arabia, would get a lot
wealthier.
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