Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 March 2020
Over the past fifteen months oil prices have steadily risen from around $60 a barrel to over $100, as we can see from Figure 1. The projections in our forecast are based on information from futures markets and on projections by the US Energy Information Administration, and as prices have risen there has been increasing evidence that they are considered to be overshooting a sustainable position, as can be seen from our projections for oil prices. Oil prices are expected to fall back to $90 a barrel by the end of 2009. Hence the current oil price shock can be seen as a combination of a temporary increase and a permanent increase in oil prices. The impact of increases in oil prices on growth depends in part on the reasons for the increase, with the effects of supply reduction induced increases in prices being more negative than demand induced increases in prices. A supply reduction involves a loss of revenue for producers as compared to a fixed volume demand induced rise in oil prices, and hence a supply reduction would result in lower levels of imports by oil producers.