Use of political pressure as a policy tool during the 1979 oil-supply crisis. [Monograph]
The response of American markets to supply crisis in world oil markets is analyzed in the context of four main issues: the efficiency of the operation of American oil markets during oil-supply crises; the problems of both economic efficiency and social equity that arise during the American adaptation process; the propriety of the federal government's past policy responses to these problems; and the relationship between perceptions of the problems caused by world oil crises and the real economic nature of these problems. The conclusion is reached that federal intervention has caused the bulk of the genuine oil-market inefficiencies experienced by American consumers since 1973, and has forced major oil companies in particular into price and supply behavior at odds with the interests of the firms themselves and society's interests in maximizing national economic output. 64 references, 15 figures, 11 tables.
- OSTI ID:
- 6942833
- Resource Relation:
- Related Information: Discussion Paper Series
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
POLICY AND ECONOMY
02 PETROLEUM
PETROLEUM
SUPPLY DISRUPTION
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
POLITICAL ASPECTS
ECONOMIC IMPACT
MARKET
ECONOMICS
ENERGY SOURCES
FOSSIL FUELS
FUELS
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
294002* - Energy Planning & Policy- Petroleum
020700 - Petroleum- Economics
Industrial
& Business Aspects