The control of oil / John M. Blair.

An exhaustive and generally balanced account of why the US and other industrial powers became dangerously dependent on foreign oil. A college professor who served thirteen years as chief economist of the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly, Blair chronicles how seven major international pe...

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Bibliographic Details
Online Access: Full Text (via Internet Archive)
Main Author: Blair, John M. (John Malcolm), 1914-1976
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York : Pantheon Books, ©1976.
Edition:1st ed.
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Summary:An exhaustive and generally balanced account of why the US and other industrial powers became dangerously dependent on foreign oil. A college professor who served thirteen years as chief economist of the Senate Subcommittee on Antitrust and Monopoly, Blair chronicles how seven major international petroleum producers--integrated from well to gas pump--began operating in restraint of trade with the usually eager complicity of Mideast rulers around the turn of the century "to avoid the rigors of price rivalry." Even as control of concessions passes to host nations through nationalization or pre-emptive participation agreements, he maintains, Big Oil retains its hold. Although crude quotas have quadrupled since 1973, OPEC still dances to the majors' tune in fear that oversupply could break prices in the West's volume markets. Having documented both the causes and consequences of monopolistic control of oil resources, Blair suggests several remedies, chiefly utility-style federal regulation of large crude suppliers and vigorous enforcement of antitrust statutes. The book touches on petroleum alternatives as well as supplements (synthetics, electric cars, fuel cells). While Blair's style must be characterized as academic-graceless, he provides damning detail for the upcoming debate on the extent to which oil-industry concentration represents an abuse of economic power overdue for redress. His work is as important and valuable as it is disturbing.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xxii, 441 pages : illustrations)
Bibliography:Includes list of charts, list of tables, bibliographical references and chapter notes (pages 401-427) and index.