Friday, April 24, 2009

Oil Policy Iran and Iraq

This was an interesting article that compared the oil policies of both Iran and Iraq. In an effort to appease their populations, both the government of Iraq and Iran implemented a policy that allowed gas to be sold under half a dollar. This was ill advised because both governments ultimately had to import gasoline (odd, for gas-producing nations) and subsidize it to maintain those cheap prices.

Iraq changed their policy to raise the price of gas to above a dollar in 2006. By the time this article was written, in 2007, Iran tried to implement a similar reform, but riots broke out in response.

As a result, the gas prices between Iran and Iraq varied greatly, which led to a black market for Iranian oil. Sellers took Iranian oil and sold them at cheaper prices to Iraqis. Iran’s economic condition was suffering from these transactions because it was also the Iraqi population that benefited from Iran-subsidized oil.

This article clearly explained to me how a black market is encouraged when governments differently approach the issue of, for example, oil policy. From the perspective of the Iranian-oil dealers, it is interesting how simply jumping a border and entering a different “space” can promise so much more profit than doing the same activity in the previous space. This, of course, is not a new idea.

Space, in this sense, is obviously key in determining black market activity. It was the policy differences of these countries that determined the supply and demand for black market oil.

3 comments:

  1. I wonder if Iran's prices has gone up since this article was written. If the Iranian people's economic conditions are being harmed by the black market sale of gas, they may not be so vehemently against an increase in gas price.
    I also wonder why Iranian people rioted and prevented a gas price increase, but not Iraq. Because the Iranian government tried to raise the prices after the Iraqi government did, Iraq could have been used as an example to coax the Iranian population to accept the change. Also, if anyone predicted this black market trade of oil, it may have been useful in convincing the Iranian people to adopt the price change.

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  3. I couldn't find the current price of gas in Iran or why the Iraqi's didn't riot. I did look into more of the Iranian riots, and I feel as if the rationing and changes in fuel cost came at a bad time. It could have been the "straw that broke the camel's back". Housing and food prices dramatically rose the previous year. According to the article, many people thought that this increase in fuel cost would make the inflation worse.

    link: http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2003765649_irangas28.html

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