Oil prices heavily influence the world economy because most manufacturing plants within a country will need oil as its main source of energy.
Each country varies as to what type of manufacturing they will have, but the main source of energy will stay the same.
The higher the prices of oil become, the higher the cost of manufacturing, the lower the prices of oil become the lower the prices of manufacturing.
2006-12-25 01:21:24
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answer #2
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answered by siikwan 2
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Very simple...
Everything we do... relies on oil.
We need it for going from A to B.
And every single item we buy needs to be transported to the shop... sometimes from across the world.
The farmer use a lot of oil to operate their machineries. So does the building industry.
So when the price of oil goes up... everything else does...
That's create inflation and a rise in interest rates to control inflation so that the country does not go into debts.
By rising interest rates... it stops people borrowing money to buy things. People borrow money because when prices rises, they don't have enough money to buy things.
The result of the oil price rising affects everyone's standard of living. We are all poorer because of it.
2006-12-25 01:05:06
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answer #3
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answered by Aussies-Online 5
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well until a better energy source is invented its the best we have and we use it for everything. oil will have a large bearing on economy . i pray someone will invent something better and more economical soon.
2006-12-25 00:55:53
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answer #4
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answered by askmike 5
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oil is a major import and export for different countries. so, its price can determine how much a country has to spend or how much it earns/saves
2006-12-25 10:05:27
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answer #5
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answered by sushobhan 6
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Few things frighten governments as much as the boom and bust in oil prices.
Since entrepreneurs first started to extract oil from the ground in the early 19th century, the commodity has spawned a billion-dollar industry.
The provision of heat, light and transport often depends on oil and some of the great economic dramas of the last century have been triggered by a change in the price of oil.
The price of oil
"Black gold" has made instant millionaires of many, providing the inspiration for Dallas, a 1980's television drama about a ruthless oil tycoon, JR Ewing.
From the minute an entrepreneur strikes oil, to when a car driver draws up to the petrol station, many people can make a buck from the sale of oil.
Shell operates many UK petrol stations
Oil companies negotiate rents from countries for the right to exploit oil and licences to explore for oil are a handy source of income for many countries.
Thousands of oil deals are struck at commodity exchanges, such as London's International Petroleum Exchange.
Many of these arrange for delivery of oil at a future date at an agreed price, so people can protect themselves against sudden changes in the oil price.
Crisis in oil
The price of oil is influenced by many factors, but the most important ones tend to be supply and demand as well as political uncertainty or change.
Think of high oil prices and many people think of Middle Eastern sheikhs holding the West to ransom.
The oil-producing countries originally banded together to regain control of a commodity they felt Western oil companies were monopolising for profit.
These companies had kept oil prices low, increasing the West's dependence on oil as a source of energy and fuelling Western prosperity.
Iraq is an Opec founding member
In September 1960, Iran, Iraq, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela met in Baghdad to set up the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).
Ineffectual for many years, OPEC asserted itself in the early 1970s when it raised oil prices 130%.
The oil crisis of the seventies prompted a world recession.
Oil companies and manufacturers rushed to pass the cost on to consumers, prompting inflation, recession and high unemployment in industrialised countries.
Among other things, the oil crisis prompted a three day week in the UK, as part of an ongoing effort to save energy.
As well, it resulted in the death of the petrol engine in London's black cabs, many of which have now been replaced by diesel engines.
Oil - a recession trigger?
Many analysts make the link between high oil prices and global recession.
Recessions in the 1970s, the early 1980s and the early 1990s were all preceded by a rise in the oil price.
A second oil shock in 1979, combined with the 1979 Iranian revolution and the beginning of the Iran/Iraq war sent prices higher.
During the Gulf War, prompted by Iraq's occupation of Kuwait in 1990, oil prices again shot higher, out of fear that fighting in the area would affect supply.
In recent years, the US and Europe have benefited from the fall in oil prices, triggered in part by the 1997 Asia financial crisis.
This allowed the US economy to grow, without a simultaneous boom in inflation.
When the price of oil hit $10, it prompted OPEC to cut production last March.
This conspired with the emergence of Asian countries from recession - and an increase in the demand for oil -to push the oil price to over $30.
Oil may be less important to the world economy than it was in the 1970s, but in a US election year, a high oil price raises fears about inflation as well as disgruntled voters.
The cost of oil has also driven US imports higher, sending the US trade deficit to record levels in the past year.
The oil companies
Last year's low oil prices helped bring about mergers between BP and Amoco and Mobil and Exxon.
While these companies will benefit from a higher oil price, many traditional oil companies are looking to diversify into other fuels, such as gas.
Shell now defines itself as an oil and gas company and it is investing in renewable energy technologies such as solar, wind power and wave power.
Other manufacturers have found that in an increasingly competitive world, instead of passing the cost onto consumers when the oil price rises, they have to take a hit on profits themselves.
Profits of airline companies, among others, have been hit by the high cost of jet fuel.
2006-12-25 01:01:56
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answer #6
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answered by Brian and Kari 2
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