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The Oil Intensity of Output

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 March 2020

Extract

Since our last forecast in April 2008 there have been further increases in oil prices, as is illustrated in figure 1, which tracks oil price projections in our forecasts this year, and compares them to the projection we made in January and July 2007. Over the past eighteen months oil prices have risen from around $60 per barrel to a currently projected level of $123 in 2009. Oil prices have recently reached a peak of $145.6 a barrel before falling back to around $134. Our projection for the short term is based on those of the US Energy Information Agency and uses information from forward markets as well as an evaluation of supply conditions. In the longer term we presume that real oil prices will rise in line with the real interest rate, as is discussed on pp. 4–7 of this Review. This note looks at the impacts of recent increases in oil prices on the path for real wages by investigating the share of fossil fuels in costs. It also evaluates the impact of the rise in prices since our last forecast, and investigates the impact on oil prices of the growth in demand outside the OECD.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 National Institute of Economic and Social Research

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References

Barrell, R. and Kirby, S. (2008), ‘Oil prices and growth’, National Institute Economic Review, 204, pp. 2942.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barrell, R. and Pomerantz, O. (2008), ‘Oil prices and world inflation’, National Institute Economic Review, 203, pp. 31–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar