A global economic crisis is the most difficult kind of event to predict. This article asks a straightforward question: did anyone come close to anticipating the oil crisis of 1973/74, which represented a new type of historical sequence? Was the likelihood of an oil shock self-evident at the time? To answer this, I examine the degree of awareness in Europe and the United States of the three possible triggering factors: Egypt’s disposition to start a war and enlist the support of oil-producers; the Arab interest in oil conservation and long-term income maximization; and the imbalance in the oil market and the delayed adjustment of oil prices. For each of these topics, I set out both what was expected and what was actually in the offing; the ...
crisis differential accumulation energy conflicts Middle East Petro-CoreDuring the late 1980s and ea...
This paper is based on the points made at a Seminar on the 18th June, 1974. It is based on an articl...
The energy crisis of the 1970s in the United States consisted of three separate but related problems...
A global economic crisis is the most difficult kind of event to predict. This article asks a straigh...
WOS:000343528000004 (Nº de Acesso Web of Science)A global economic crisis is the most difficult kind...
The oil crisis, or “oil shock”, has long been considered an unexpected and sudden turning point for ...
The paper aims at understanding if the First Oil Shock has produced long-term effects to the economi...
The oil shock of 1973-1974 was an economic and politic important event that produced controversies i...
Changes in the energy sector cannot be sufficiently described as reactions to past and present ener...
This article traces one aspect of Britain's approach to the political economy of energy conservation...
Much of the existing historical research discusses the 1973 oil crisis through single national persp...
Traditional literature on energy economics gives a central role to exogenous political events (suppl...
During the early 1980s, the international oil market has changed from a sellers' to a buyers' market...
The risk of an oil supply disruption still exists. Oil reserves are increasingly concentrated in a h...
capital differential accumulation peak oilFROM THE ARTICLE: Peak oil will come. When it does, its ef...
crisis differential accumulation energy conflicts Middle East Petro-CoreDuring the late 1980s and ea...
This paper is based on the points made at a Seminar on the 18th June, 1974. It is based on an articl...
The energy crisis of the 1970s in the United States consisted of three separate but related problems...
A global economic crisis is the most difficult kind of event to predict. This article asks a straigh...
WOS:000343528000004 (Nº de Acesso Web of Science)A global economic crisis is the most difficult kind...
The oil crisis, or “oil shock”, has long been considered an unexpected and sudden turning point for ...
The paper aims at understanding if the First Oil Shock has produced long-term effects to the economi...
The oil shock of 1973-1974 was an economic and politic important event that produced controversies i...
Changes in the energy sector cannot be sufficiently described as reactions to past and present ener...
This article traces one aspect of Britain's approach to the political economy of energy conservation...
Much of the existing historical research discusses the 1973 oil crisis through single national persp...
Traditional literature on energy economics gives a central role to exogenous political events (suppl...
During the early 1980s, the international oil market has changed from a sellers' to a buyers' market...
The risk of an oil supply disruption still exists. Oil reserves are increasingly concentrated in a h...
capital differential accumulation peak oilFROM THE ARTICLE: Peak oil will come. When it does, its ef...
crisis differential accumulation energy conflicts Middle East Petro-CoreDuring the late 1980s and ea...
This paper is based on the points made at a Seminar on the 18th June, 1974. It is based on an articl...
The energy crisis of the 1970s in the United States consisted of three separate but related problems...