In what has become an annual
ritual, the wizards of Congress are going after the leaders of Big Oil
again. This is political theater at its most cynical. It’s the modern
version of the Salem witch hunt. The rapid rise of gasoline to $4 per
gallon is a pain in the patootie, and somebody needs to be blamed, but
why blame the American oil companies?
For some folks, Big Oil’s guilt is inherent in
the simple fact that these companies are big. Everyone knows that big
is bad, right? (Except for Big Government, of course, because people in
government are honest, pure, and noble, unlike people in the private
sector.)
Just how big is America’s Big Oil club? Well, the biggest of the big—ExxonMobil—is ranked only around 20th of the world’s largest oil producers. Exxon owns a modest 1.08 percent of the world’s proven petroleum reserves.
The oil producers that are larger than Exxon
are all state-owned entities—that is, the governments of Saudi Arabia,
Kuwait, Venezuela, Mexico, etc. Not only are those producers foreign
(meaning they lie outside of Congress’ jurisdiction and therefore won’t
be called on the carpet to account for the pain Americans feel at the
gas pump), they are notoriously corrupt and inefficient. (Gee, maybe
not everyone who is in government is so pure after all.) These
nationalized operations are plagued with mismanagement and inferior
engineering. The results are subpar recovery rates and the premature
decline of their oil fields—a major reason why global supply is
struggling to keep pace with demand.
If those vast foreign oil resources were
managed by America’s Big Oil—the real professionals of the trade—the
global supply situation would be much improved. The problem, for all of
us who long for lower fuel prices, isn’t that American Big Oil is too
big, but that its share of the global petroleum market is too small.
But aren’t Big Oil’s profits obscene? True,
ExxonMobil is earning more dollars than any private-sector corporation
in history. That is hardly surprising, considering how voracious the
American thirst for oil and gasoline is, and ExxonMobil is our largest
supplier. Nevertheless, Big Oil’s rate of profit is unexceptional. The
industry average for American oil companies last year was 8.3
percent—while American cigarette and beverage companies’ average profit
margins were 19.1 percent, pharmaceutical companies’ 18.4 percent, and
American manufacturers’ 8.9 percent. (Who said U.S. manufacturing can’t
compete?) American banks, insurance companies, telecom services, health
care, and media companies routinely have higher profit margins than the
oil industry, so why aren’t the CEOs in those markets called on the
carpet by Congress and threatened with special punitive taxes?
What is obscene are not Big Oil’s profits, but
Congress’ verbal assault on those profits. The amount of money that
Congress has taken from Big Oil through taxes over the past 20 years
exceeds Big Oil’s profits. Yep. Big Oil did all the work, Congress
shamelessly helped itself to the lion’s share of their profits, and now
Congress threatens to take more. Big Oil spends virtually all its
profits on developing additional supplies of oil. Does Congress really
want to divert money from producing more oil? How will reducing the
supply of oil help the price of gas to fall?
Come to think of it, maybe Congress really
intends to reduce the amount of energy that Big Oil produces. After
all, for decades it has been Congress’ bipartisan policy to forbid
development of the extensive petroleum reserves that we know are
offshore and in Alaska. Just last December, the political
powers-that-be imposed a moratorium on developing the oil resources in
Wyoming, Utah, and Colorado. There is more oil there than in all of
Saudi Arabia. The catch is that it is trapped in shale rock, which
means it is going to be expensive to recover, but economically viable
in a world of $100-plus-per-barrel oil prices.
When congressmen grill oil executives, you are
witnessing a classic political sleight of hand. Congress wants to get
your attention fixed on Big Oil so you don’t stop to think how
irresponsible Congress itself has been in blocking the development of
domestic oil deposits.
This drama reminds me of Shakespeare’s classic
tragedy, “Othello.” The villain, Iago, poisons the mind of Othello
against his innocent wife, Desdemona, by pouring lies into Othello’s
ear. Today, congressional Iagos—themselves guilty of thwarting American
energy independence—are poisoning the minds of gullible Americans
against the very oil companies that reliably supply us with essential
fuels, and would be producing even more (resulting in lower prices) if
Congress weren’t blocking them from doing so. When it comes to energy,
Congress is the problem and Big Oil is part of the solution. The longer
it takes Americans to perceive this, the longer our energy woes will
continue.