terça-feira, 13 de setembro de 2011

Peak oil review - Sept 12



1. Oil and the Global Economy


In a short trading week, oil prices gained on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday in anticipation of President Obama’s job stimulus speech and then fell sharply on Friday on fears for the future of the EU. The week’s trading was dominated by the possibility of a Greek default and repercussions that would occur should that happen. The euro sank 3.8 percent last week to close at $1.36, the lowest level against the Japanese yen in 10 years. European bank and sovereign credit risk surged to an all-time high on concerns about policy disagreements in the European Central Bank.



The EU financial crisis overshadowed President Obama’s proposal of a $447 billion mix of tax cuts and new spending to create more jobs in the US. NY oil closed out the week at $87.24 a barrel after trading above $90 on Wednesday and Thursday, while London’s Brent settled on Friday at $112.77 up 0.4 percent for the week.



The hurricane threat to Gulf oil production seems to be over for the moment and output is returning to normal. Gasoline futures in NY fell by nearly 10 cents a gallon on Friday, closing at $2.77 as attention shifted to weakening demand across the US. Over the last four weeks demand for gasoline in the US is down 2.9 percent from last year. Barclays Capital estimates that US gasoline demand over the summer driving season in the US was 4.1 percent lower than in 2010 as retail gasoline prices ran some 34 percent higher.



Concern about the sagging global economy continues to grow. The OECD estimates that the potential output of its 34 members has dropped 2.5 percent in the last few years and that most are taking a permanent hit to their growth rate trend.



The premium of $26 a barrel that London’s Brent crude is demanding over NY’s West Texas Intermediate continues to be a puzzlement. For many months it was common wisdom that a large glut of oil at the Cushing, OK contract delivery point has been keeping US prices low. In recent weeks the surpluses at Cushing have been worked off and for the last two months inventories there have been 2.8 million barrels lower than in 2010.



The reason for the large spread, which some traders say is roughly $10 a barrel too high, is now being placed on falling North Sea oil production and the Libyan outage. Although there are plans to resume some Libyan exports this week, fighting in the country is still going on so that it is likely to be many months before large quantities are again exported regularly. If the Keystone pipeline from Cushing to the Gulf becomes a reality in the next few years that could help to relieve the situation.



In the meantime, the constant repetition of the NY oil prices in the US media as the value of oil is leaving a false impression that oil is considerably cheaper than the prices US refiners are paying for imports. The cost of oil imports, of course, is a major reason why US gasoline prices have remained so high this summer. Brent crude, which is indicative of the "real" price of oil has now been above $100 a barrel for the last 8 months and shows no sign of falling below that level in the immediate future. In 2008 Brent oil prices were above $100 a barrel for only five months and then was trading in the vicinity of $60 a barrel by the end of the year. This year’s price increase is looking like more of a permanent plateau in the vicinity of $110-120 a barrel and is likely to cause more economic damage than the quick surge and fall of prices three years ago.



2. China

The news out of China last week suggests continuing growth and increasing demand for oil. Beijing announced that its July crude import figures were 6.3 percent too low as somebody forgot in add in the oil imported via the newly opened pipeline from Russia. The Saudis increased the prices they charge Asian buyers by 90 cents a barrel over the regional Oman/Dubai benchmark. They did this while cutting premiums for cargoes to the US suggesting that Riyadh foresees continued strong demand from Asia and weaker demand from the US. Beijing also revised its 2010 GDP growth by 0.1 percent to 10.4 percent. Manufacturing and construction in 2010 was revised up to a 12.4 percent growth.



After increasing interest rates five times and minimum bank reserves nine times, the Chinese seem to be making headway against inflation while still maintaining solid economic growth. Beijing reported last week that its consumer price index for August rose by 6.2 percent year over year as compared to 6.5 percent in July. Much of the inflation problem is food prices which moderated to a 13.4 percent increase in August, year over year, from a 14.8 percent increase in July. Although some progress is being made, inflation remains China’s number one problem. Middle class demand for food and consumer goods are rising along with once-cheap wages for factory workers.



China rang up some healthy economic numbers in August, however, with exports up 24.5 percent from 20.4 percent in July and imports were up 30.2 percent – all year over year. China imported 21.04 million tons of crude in August, up 1.8 percent from July. Oil imports in August slipped to the lowest rate this year; maintenance schedules were the main reason behind the dip. Crude imports are expected to be stronger in September.



New statistics show Chinese industrial production in August rising by 13.5 percent over last year and fixed asset investment increasing by 25 percent in the first 8 months of the year over last year.



Overall, numbers issued over the last few months continue to suggest that China is weathering the global downturn well and is on track for 9+ percent economic growth this year.



Quote of the week

"A significant number of petroleum geologists believe that in this decade, and perhaps already, we have reached global peak oil production, something that happened in 1970 in America, where half of all the oil that we can get out of the ground has been taken out… that’s a cause of great concern independent of global warming...."

-- President Bill Clinton in a Keynote Speech



The Briefs (clips from recent Peak Oil News dailies are indicated by date and item #)



•Libya's Arabian Gulf Oil Company is hoping to be able to export Mellitah crude as early as next week. (9/9, #5) (9/10, #6)

•Iraqi Deputy Oil Minister al-Shamma said at an Iraqi mining conference in London that Iraq needed roughly $30 billion in investments to build five oil refineries. (9/10, #8)

•A consortium of energy companies reported a large oil discovery off the coast of French Guiana, opening up a potentially massive frontier of petroleum development along the northern coast of South America. (9/10, #13)

•Exxon and Chevron are increasing their lobbying efforts to push the US government to grant drilling permits for exploration. (9/10, #20)

•The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers released a set of principles to govern the controversial practice of hydraulic fracturing used to release reserves of natural gas. (9/10, #24)

•Total announced a major gas discovery in the Caspian Sea in the Absheron block offshore Azerbaijan. (9/10, #25)

•The US Department of Energy said it was investing more than $230 million in clean energy projects ranging from geothermal energy to wind energy systems. (9/10, #29)

•Meetings between the new head of the IEA, Maria van der Hoeven, and members of OPEC in Vienna are part of a broader outreach program. (9/8, #3) (9/9, #3)

•Lebanon warned the United Nations that Israel's proposed maritime border threatens peace and security, as the two East Mediterranean nations spar over offshore oil and gas reserves.(9/9, #7)

•Pakistan loses 500,000 Mcf/day of gas due to theft and a poor distribution network, forcing gas companies to increase load shedding to textile mills and compressed natural gas stations. (9/9, #8)

•African Petroleum Corp said its Apalis-1 deepwater wildcat off Liberia confirmed the critical components of a working hydrocarbon system but found no commercial quality reservoir. (9/9, #12)

•Queenslanders face up to 143 minutes of blackouts in 2012-13 because of soaring demand for power and pressure on its electricity generation capacity, new modeling finds. (9/9, #19)

•Saying that it's as important to increase federal revenue as to cut government spending, US House Natural Resources Committee Chairman Doc Hastings (R-Wash.) said he intends to ask the congressional deficit reduction "super committee" to consider oil and gas leasing on the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge's coastal plain. (9/9, #21)

•A successful appraisal well in a previously untested northern segment of Mad Dog field in the US Gulf of Mexico has hiked the complex's resource to as much as 4 billion bbl of oil equivalent in place, rivaling that of the Thunder Horse field. (9/9, #23)

•UK oil production fell below 1 million barrels per day (bpd) for only the second time in more than 30 years this summer as maintenance exacerbated a decline in output from depleted North Sea oilfields. (9/9, #24)

•Brussels is seeking to assert more control over energy deals between EU members and third parties. (9/9, #25)

•The minimum summertime volume of Arctic sea ice fell to a record low last year. (9/8, #6)

•In a sign of growing interest in Iraq's upcoming bidding round – its fourth auction for oil and gas development deals since mid-2009 – another six foreign oil companies have been pre-qualified to participate, days after an American firm was disqualified for signing deals with the semi-autonomous Kurdistan region. (9/8, #10)

•Saudi Arabia's water challenges are growing as energy-intensive desalination erodes oil revenues while peak water looms more ominously than peak oil. Water use in the desert kingdom is already almost double the per capita global average and increasing at an ever faster rate with the rapid expansion of Saudi Arabia's population and industrial development. (9/8, #11)

•A delegation led by William Reilly, a top official at the National Oil Spill Commission, left for Cuba to discuss Havana's oil plans. Cuba is looking into cutting the amount of oil it imports from Venezuela through development of offshore reserves. US Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, R-Fla., chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, said sending a US delegation to Cuba sends the wrong message. (9/8, #13)

•Rising sea levels could force Kiribati authorities to move the country's entire population onto artificial islands. Some villages in the country have already been forced to relocate due to rising sea levels. Kiribati President Tong said if the situation continued to decline, the government would consider moving the entire population - of 100,000 people - to artificial islands. (9/8, #15)

•The chief executive of one of the top US natural gas producers delivered a blistering rebuke of critics of shale gas drilling on Wednesday, calling them fear-mongering extremists who want Americans to live in a world where "it's cold, it's dark and we're all hungry." (9/8, #21)

•In a detailed assessment of the Deepwater Horizon oil spill, researchers have determined that the blown-out Macondo well spewed oil at a rate of about 57,000 barrels a day, totaling nearly 5 million barrels of oil released from the well between April 20 and July 15, 2010. In addition, the well released some 100 million cubic feet per day of natural gas. (9/8, #22)

•Russia can double its oil reserves if the government exploits the potential in the Arctic, a senior Lukoil Holdings executive said. (9/8, #25)

•Russia Deputy Prime Minister Sechin gathered government officials to formulate a response to looming fuel shortages at the nation's airports. Sechin announced at the meeting that a 10-day fuel reserve was to be created for the capital's airports. (9/8, #26)

•Halliburton Chief Executive Lesar said there are "fantastic and phenomenal opportunities" for oilfield service companies to expand shale drilling beyond North America, but that growth may come slowly. (9/7, #5)

•Chevron reported a crude oil discovery on its Moccasin prospect on Keathley Canyon Block 736, adding to its portfolio in the Lower Tertiary trend of the deepwater Gulf of Mexico. (9/7, #11)

•Sunoco said it will exit the refining business, underscoring how tough it is for US refiners to profit as they spend more to make gasoline while selling less of the fuel. (9/7, #12)

•Russian natural gas began to flow Tuesday through the Nord Stream pipeline under the Baltic Sea, inaugurating a controversial and expensive Russian-German project with geopolitical overtones. (9/7, #13)

•Any serious oil spill in the ice of the Arctic, the "new frontier" for oil exploration, is likely to be an uncontrollable environmental disaster despoiling vast areas of the world's most untouched ecosystem, according to Peter Wadhams, Professor of ocean physics at the University of Cambridge. (9/7, #14)

•OPEC members Saudi Arabia and Kuwait boosted their oil production in August to prevent prices from rising sharply and negatively impacting on the world economy, Kuwait's oil minister said. (9/6, #5)

•Iran made its first counterproposal in two years to ease the confrontation with the West over its nuclear program, offering to allow international inspectors "full supervision" of the country's nuclear activities for the next five years, but on the condition that the mounting sanctions against Iran are lifted. (9/6, #6)

•Iran's first nuclear power plant has finally begun to provide electricity to the national grid, official news media reported, a long-delayed milestone in the nuclear ambitions of a country the West fears is covertly trying to develop atomic weapons. (9/6, #7)

•Panama's National Energy Secretariat announced that 900 million barrels of oil have been detected at two basins in eastern Panama, representing a potential contribution to the Panamanian Treasury of $15 billion dollars over the next two decades at current oil prices. (9/6, #9)

•For General Motors, the new Chevrolet Volt plug-in hybrid represents the automotive future, the culmination of decades of high-tech research financed partly with federal dollars. But as G.M. prepares to start selling them in China by the end of this year, the Chinese government is putting heavy pressure on the company to share some of the car's core technology. (9/6, #10)

•A succession of government officials at a weekend conference called for China's automakers to shift their focus from making ever more cars and toward producing more fuel-efficient and more advanced models, including gasoline-electric hybrids and all-electric cars. (9/6, #9)

•Russia may start producing gas at the giant Shtokman offshore gas field in the Arctic from the fourth quarter of 2016, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said. (9/6, #12)

•The U.K. government will reveal a device designed to cap an underwater oil well in the event of a major incident so as to minimize environmental damage, the Oil Spill Prevention and Response Advisory Group said. The device was designed in response to BP PLC's (BP) oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico in April 2010. (9/6, #13)

BG planeja ser a segunda no Brasil

Valor 13/09
A britânica BG Group, empresa integrada de gás natural, planeja tornar-se até o fim da década a segunda maior produtora de petróleo do Brasil, atrás apenas da Petrobras. Para atingir a meta, a companhia terá investido US$ 30 bilhões no país até 2020, quando espera estar produzindo 550 mil barris de óleo equivalente (BOE) por dia. Desde o início da década até hoje a BG conseguiu um rápido progresso no país. Desde 2000 a empresa investiu no país cerca de US$ 5 bilhões. E prevê aplicar mais US$ 25 bilhões até 2020

A maior parte dos recursos será aplicada em atividades de exploração e produção em cinco blocos do pré-sal na Bacia de Santos nos quais a empresa é sócia da Petrobras e de outros parceiros privados. "Não há dúvidas de que nos tornaremos o segundo maior produtor de hidrocarbonetos [do país] depois da Petrobras", disse ontem ao Valor o presidente mundial da BG, Frank Chapman. Segundo Chapman, o Brasil passará a produzir em 2020 cerca de um terço da produção mundial do grupo. Em 2010, o Brasil contribuiu com apenas 1% da produção da BG, segundo dados do balanço da empresa.

Chapman está no país com outros diretores e conselheiros da BG para participar da reunião do conselho de administração da companhia. Segundo ele, a realização do encontro no Rio, onde fica a sede da BG Brasil, relaciona-se com o fato de o país ser hoje um dos mercados mais importantes, em termos de crescimento, na carteira da BG.

A BG é sócia não-operadora nos blocos BM-S-9, onde tem 30%; BM-S-10 (25%), BM-S-11 (25%) e BM-S-50 (20%). No BM-S-52, onde tem participação de 40%, a BG é operadora somente na fase exploratória.

Os bons resultados obtidos pela BG no Brasil podem ser explicados por vários motivos, afirmou Chapman. Ele disse que um deles foi a "sorte" de ter compartilhado com a Petrobras algumas das melhores descobertas feitas no pré-sal. Uma delas foi o BM-S-11, onde está o campo de Lula, com reservas inicias estimadas entre 5 e 8 bilhões de BOE. "O nível de recursos que podemos descobrir [no Brasil], em volume de hidrocarbonetos, é gigantesco", disse Chapman.

As reservas da BG, nos campos nos quais participa no Brasil, são estimadas pela empresa em 6 bilhões de BOE, com potencial de chegar a 8 bilhões de BOE. O volume previsto dobrou em relação à estimativa inicial de reservas feita pela companhia em 2010, de 3 bilhões de barris de óleo equivalente. Como resultado de reservas maiores, a BG passou a prever uma produção diária no Brasil, em 2020, de 550 mil BOE, quase 40% acima da previsão inicial de produção feita pela empresa para o fim desta década, que era de 400 mil BOE/dia.

Nelson Silva, presidente da BG Brasil, disse que a previsão de uma produção maior em 2020 foi possível graças à revisão das reservas e recursos feita pela empresa em 2010. As reservas são os volumes recuperáveis e os recursos são os volumes que a empresa acredita que vai recuperar em uma segunda fase de exploração. No BM-S-11, a plataforma Cidade de Angra dos Reis está conectada a um poço, no campo de Lula, produzindo cerca de 28 mil barris por dia, disse Silva. A expectativa é de que em breve a plataforma seja ligada a mais dois poços, o que pode permitir terminar 2011 com produção de cerca de 90 mil barris por dia no campo de Lula. Desse total, 25% correspondem à parcela da BG.

Chapman disse que a BG também contou, nas parcerias para explorar as áreas no Brasil, com investidores que contavam com uma rápida comercialização. A BG já fez um embarque de óleo do campo de Lula, cuja declaração de comercialidade ocorreu no fim do ano passado, e espera realizar outra venda até o fim de 2011.

Ontem, Chapman conversou com o presidente do Banco Nacional de Desenvolvimento Econômico e Social (BNDES), Luciano Coutinho, e com diretores do banco. O BNDES é potencial fonte de financiamento para o plano de investimentos da BG no Brasil. Mas Chapman disse que o investimento será financiado, sobretudo, com o fluxo de caixa operacional da empresa. Em 2010, a BG, presente em mais de 25 países, registrou lucro antes de juros, impostos, depreciação e amortização (Ebitda, na sigla em inglês) de US$ 10 bilhões.

Chapman analisou o cenário para acesso a crédito em meio à atual crise econômica nos Estados Unidos e Europa. "Devemos encarar muito seriamente a possibilidade de que vá haver uma diminuição de liquidez no mercado de dívida." Fabio Barbosa, diretor financeiro do BG Group, disse que em função desse cenário a empresa tenta diversificar suas fontes de financiamento. Segundo ele, o fluxo de caixa da empresa é forte e a ideia é financiar o programa de investimentos com recursos próprios e de mercado.

O executivo também deixou claro que os US$ 30 bilhões que estão sendo investidos pela BG no Brasil não consideram novas oportunidades de negócios que possam surgir no país. Perguntado se a BG pode participar de novas rodadas de licitações no modelo de concessão ou se tem planos de disputar contratos no regime de partilha da produção, Chapman respondeu dizendo gostar de uma expressão em inglês segundo a qual um negócio de segunda vez é sempre um bom negócio. Ele se referiu ao fato de a empresa já ter investido muito no país e de que gostaria de fazer novos investimentos.

"Mas não podemos especular. Será preciso ver oportunamente o que vai ser oferecido." Ele também mostrou-se otimista com o desenvolvimento de uma indústria local de bens e serviços para o setor de petróleo. "É uma área na qual estamos alinhados com o governo. É nosso interesse ajudar a desenvolver [a indústria local]."

quinta-feira, 11 de agosto de 2011

Peak oil notes



Peak oil notes - Aug 11

by Tom Whipple

Developments this week

The downgrade of US government debt by S&P over the weekend sent the equity markets into a free fall taking oil along for the ride. NY oil futures which had been trading close to $99 a barrel at the beginning of last week fell steadily until they were trading below $76 a barrel during the Tuesday session – a fall of $23. On Wednesday oil prices reversed after the EIA reported that the US crude inventory had fallen by 5.2 million barrels as opposed to the 1.3 million barrel increase analysts had been expecting. NY crude then settled at $82.89 a barrel and in London Brent settled at $106.70 on Wednesday.

On Tuesday, the Federal Reserve announced that it would keep interest rates low for the next two years and would use other tools “as appropriate” to support the economy. This set off speculation that another round of quantitative easing was on the way which would send the dollar lower and oil prices higher.

Gasoline prices also rebounded Wednesday after the IEA reported that inventories had fallen by 1.6 million barrels last week despite an increase in US refining operations. Gasoline futures which traded as high as $3.14 a gallon at the beginning of the month touched a low of $2.59 on Tuesday – a decline of 55 cents a gallon. NY gasoline futures closed at $2.77 a gallon on Wednesday. The IEA also reported that US demand for oil products rose by 652,000 b/d to 20.3 million last week, the highest since last December.

Beijing reports that its inflation unexpectedly accelerated to a 37 month high in July with the CPI reaching 6.5 percent year on year. China’s trade figures for July showed that exports and imports rose faster than expected. Exports increased by 20.4 percent over July 2010 and imports increased by 22.9 percent. This suggests that China’s economy is still growing rapidly despite various surveys that show growth slowing. Chinese oil imports fell to 4.6 million b/d in July, the lowest level since October 2010. While some of this slowdown is due to a heavy maintenance schedule at Chinese refineries, it also suggests that the summer power shortages that were expected a few months back have not materialized. The Chinese are also rather good at timing their crude purchases to match slumps in the market -- suggesting that we will see an increase in imports during August.

The IEA’s Oil Market Report
The agency confirmed that the Saudi’s increased their production by another 100,000 b/d in July to 9.8 million, their highest level of production in 30 years. The Saudis have now increased their production by 1.1 million b/d since the start of the Libyan uprising thereby replacing about 70 percent of the lost Libyan production. The quality of the oil produced remains a problem.

Of more interest is the IEA’s conclusion that the demand for oil has slowed markedly with the demand in June showing no increase from May. The Agency says it is cutting its forecast for demand increase in 2011 by 100,000 b/d based on slowing economic growth and, for 2012, is now contemplating the possibility that a flagging global economy could cut the increase in global demand for 2012 from 1.6 million b/d to 300,000 b/d. The agency, however, is still officially forecasting that 2012 demand will increase by 1.6 million b/d to 91.1 million b/d. This number, of course, is an amount the global oil industry is unlikely to achieve, suggesting that drawdowns of global stocks and higher prices are in the offing if an increase in demand of this size actually occurs in the next year or so.

terça-feira, 9 de agosto de 2011

Capitalism After the Crisis


Capitalism After the Crisis
LUIGI ZINGALES

The economic crisis of the past year, centered as it has been in the financial sector that lies at the heart of American capitalism, is bound to leave some lasting marks. Financial regulation, the role of large banks, and the relationships between the government and key players in the market will never be the same.

More important, however, are the ways in which public attitudes about our system might change. The nature of the crisis, and of the government's response, now threaten to undermine the public's sense of the fairness, justice, and legitimacy of democratic capitalism. By allowing the conditions that made the crisis possible (particularly the concentration of power in a few large institutions), and by responding to the crisis as we have (especially with massive government bailouts of banks and large corporations), the United States today risks moving in the direction of European corporatism and the crony capitalism of more statist regimes. This, in turn, endangers America's unique brand of capitalism, which has thus far avoided becoming associated in the public mind with entrenched corruption, and has therefore kept this country relatively free of populist anti-capitalist sentiment.

Are such changes now beginning? And if so, will they mark only a temporary reaction to an extreme economic downturn, or a deeper and more damaging shift in American attitudes? Some early indications are not encouraging.

SOAK THE RICH

A friend of mine worked as a consultant for the now-infamous ­insurance giant American International Group. To prevent him from starting his own hedge fund, AIG offered him a non-compete agreement: a sum of money meant to compensate him for the opportunity forgone. It is a perfectly standard and well-regarded practice — but unfortunately for my friend, his payment under this agreement was to be made at the end of 2008. So he spent the early months of 2009 living in terror: His contract was classified as one of the notorious AIG retention bonuses. At the height of the fury against those bonuses, he received several death threats. Though he had no legal obligation to do so, he returned the money to the company, hoping that the gesture might keep his name from being published in the papers. In case that failed to protect him, he prepared a plan to evacuate his wife and children. It was the responsible thing to do; after all, angry protestors had staked out the homes of several AIG executives whose names appeared in print — and only luck had prevented someone from getting hurt.

While such extreme episodes have, fortunately, been quite rare, they are symptomatic of a broad discontent. In one recent survey, 65% of Americans said the government should cap executive compensation by large corporations, while 60% wanted the government to intervene to improve the way corporations are run. And those views hardly reflect confidence in the government: Only 5% of Americans in the same poll said they trust the government a lot, while 30% said they do not trust it at all. It is just that, at the moment, Americans trust large corporations even less: Fewer than one out of every 30 Americans say they trust them a lot, while one of every three Americans claims not to trust large corporations at all.

These attitudes are familiar to students of public opinion in much of the world. But they are quite unusual for the United States. Until recently, Americans stood out for their acceptance of basic market principles and even for their tolerance of some of the negative side effects markets produce, such as marked income inequality.

Capitalism has long enjoyed exceptionally strong public support in the United States because America's form of capitalism has long been distinct from those found elsewhere in the world — particularly because of its uniquely open and free market system. Capitalism calls not only for freedom of enterprise, but for rules and policies that allow for freedom of entry, that facilitate access to financial resources for newcomers, and that maintain a level playing field among competitors. The United States has generally come closest to this ideal combination — which is no small feat, since economic pressures and incentives do not naturally point to such a balance of policies. While everyone benefits from a free and competitive market, no one in particular makes huge profits from keeping the system competitive and the playing field level. True capitalism lacks a strong lobby.

That assertion might appear strange in light of the billions of dollars firms spend lobbying Congress in America, but that is exactly the point. Most lobbying seeks to tilt the playing field in one direction or another, not to level it. Most lobbying is pro-business, in the sense that it promotes the interests of existing businesses, not pro-market in the sense of fostering truly free and open competition. Open competition forces established firms to prove their competence again and again; strong successful market players therefore often use their muscle to restrict such competition, and to strengthen their positions. As a result, serious tensions emerge between a pro-market agenda and a pro-business one, though American capitalism has always managed this tension far better than most.

THE AMERICAN EXCEPTION

In a recent study, Rafael Di Tella and Robert MacCulloch showed that public support for capitalism in any given country is positively associated with the perception that hard work, not luck, determines success, and is negatively correlated with the perception of corruption. These correlations go a long way toward explaining public support for ​­America's capitalist system. According to one recent study, only 40% of Americans think that luck rather than hard work plays a major role in income differences. Compare that with the 75% of Brazilians who think that income disparities are mostly a matter of luck, or the 66% of Danes and 54% of Germans who do, and you begin to get a sense of why American attitudes toward the free-market system stand out.

Some scholars argue that this perception of capitalism's legitimacy is merely the result of a successful propaganda campaign for the American Dream — a myth embedded in American culture, but not necessarily tied to reality. And it is true that the data yield scant evidence that social mobility is higher across the board in the United States than in other developed countries. But while this difference does not show up in the aggregate statistics, it is powerfully present at the top of the distribution — which often gets the most attention, and most shapes people's attitudes. Even before the internet boom created many young billionaires, in 1996, one in four billionaires in the United States could be described as "self-made" — compared to just one out of ten in Germany. And the wealthiest self-made American billionaires — from Bill Gates and Michael Dell to Warren Buffett and Mark Zuckerberg — have made their fortunes in competitive businesses, with little or no government interference or help.

The same cannot be said for most other countries, where the wealthiest people tend to accumulate their fortunes in regulated businesses in which government connections are crucial to success. Think about the oligarchs in Russia, Silvio Berlusconi in Italy, Carlos Slim in Mexico, and even the biggest tycoons in Hong Kong. They made their fortunes in businesses that are highly dependent on governmental concessions: energy, real estate, telecommunications, mining. Success in these businesses often depends more on having the right connections than on having initiative and enterprise.

In most of the world, the best way to make money is not to come up with brilliant ideas and work hard at implementing them, but to cultivate a government connection. Such cronyism is bound to shape public attitudes about a country's economic system. When asked in a recent study to name the most important determinants of financial success, Italian managers put "knowledge of influential people" in first place (80% considered it "important" or "very important"). "Competence and experience" ranked fifth, behind characteristics such as "loyalty and obedience."

These divergent paths to prosperity reveal more than a difference of perception. American capitalism really is quite distinct from its European counterparts, for reasons that reach deep into history.

THE ROOTS OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM

In America, unlike much of the rest of the West, democracy predates industrialization. By the time of the Second Industrial Revolution in the latter part of the 19th century, the United States had already enjoyed several decades of universal (male) suffrage, and several decades of widespread education. This created a public with high expectations, unlikely to tolerate evident unfairness in economic policy. It is no coincidence that the very concept of anti-trust law — a pro-market but sometimes anti-business idea — was developed in the United States at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th. It is also no coincidence that in the early part of the 20th century, fueled by an inquisitive press and a populist (but not anti-market) political movement, the United States experienced a rise in regulation aimed at reducing the power of big business. Unlike in Europe — where the most vibrant opposition to the excesses of business came from socialist anti-market movements — in the United States this opposition was squarely pro-market. When Louis Brandeis attacked the money trust, he was not fundamentally trying to interfere with markets — only trying to make them work better. As a result, Americans have long understood that the interests of the market and the interests of business may not always be aligned.

American capitalism also developed at a time when government involvement in the economy was quite weak. At the beginning of the 20th century, when modern American capitalism was taking shape, U.S. government spending was only 6.8% of gross domestic product. After World War II, when modern capitalism really took shape in Western European countries, government spending in those countries was, on average, 30% of GDP. Until World War I, the United States had a tiny federal government compared to national governments in other countries. This was due in part to the fact that the U.S. faced no significant military threat to its existence, which allowed the government to spend a relatively small proportion of its budget on the military. The federalist nature of the American regime also did its part to limit the size of the national government.

When the government is small and relatively weak, the way to make money is to start a successful private-sector business. But the larger the size and scope of government spending, the easier it is to make money by diverting public resources. Starting a business is difficult and involves a lot of risk — but getting a government favor or contract is easier, and a much safer bet. And so in nations with large and powerful governments, the state tends to find itself at the heart of the economic system, even if that system is relatively capitalist. This tends to confound politics and economics, both in practice and in public perceptions: The larger the share of capitalists who acquire their wealth thanks to their political connections, the greater the perception that capitalism is unfair and corrupt.

Another distinguishing feature of American capitalism is that it developed relatively untouched by foreign influence. Although European (and especially British) capital played a significant role in America's 19th- and early 20th-century economic development, Europe's economies were not more developed than America's — and so while European capitalists could invest in or compete with American companies, they could not dominate the system. As a result, American capitalism developed more or less organically, and still shows the marks of those origins. The American bankruptcy code, for instance, exhibits significant pro-debtor biases, because the United States was born and developed as a nation of debtors.

The situation is very different in nations that developed capitalist economies after World War II. These countries (in non-Soviet-bloc continental Europe, parts of Asia, and much of Latin America) industrialized under the giant shadow of American power. In this development process, the local elites felt threatened by the prospect of economic colonization by American companies that were far more efficient and better capitalized. To protect themselves, they purposely built a ­non-transparent system in which local connections were important, because this gave them an inherent advantage. These structures have proven resilient in the decades since: Once economic and political systems are built to reward relationships instead of efficiency, it is very difficult to reform them, since the people in power are the ones who would lose most in the change.

Finally, the United States was able to develop a pro-market agenda distinct from a pro-business agenda because it was largely spared the direct influence of Marxism. It is possible that the type of capitalism the United States developed is the cause, as much as the effect, of the absence of strong Marxist movements in this country. But either way, this distinction from other Western regimes was significant in the development of American attitudes toward economics. In countries with prominent and influential Marxist parties, pro-market and pro-business forces were compelled to merge to fight the common enemy. If one faces the prospect of nationalization (i.e., the control of resources by a small political elite), even relationship capitalism (which involves control of those resources by a small business elite) becomes an appealing alternative.

As a result, many of these countries could not develop a more competitive and open form of capitalism because they could not afford to divide the opposition to Marxism. Worse, the free-market banner was completely appropriated by the pro-business forces, which were better equipped and better fed. Paradoxically, as the appeal of Marxist ideas faded, this problem in many of these countries became worse, not better. After decades of contiguity and capture, the pro-market forces could not separate themselves from the pro-business camp. Having lost the ideological opposition of Marxism and lacking any opposition from pro-market ideology, pro-business forces ruled unchecked. In no country is this more evident than in Italy, where the pro-market movement today is almost literally owned by a businessman, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, who often seems to run the country in the interest of his media empire.

For all these reasons, the United States developed a system of capitalism that comes closer than any other to the ideal combination of economic freedom and open competition. The image many Americans have of capitalism is therefore that of Horatio Alger's rags-to-riches-via-hard-work stories, which have come to define the American Dream. By contrast, in most of the rest of the world, Horatio Alger is unknown — and the image of social mobility is dominated by Cinderella or Evita stories: fantasies more than plausible dreams. This understanding of opportunity has helped make capitalism popular and secure in the United States.

But because the free-market system relies on this public support, and this support depends to a certain extent on the public's impression that the system is fair, any erosion of that impression threatens the system itself. Such erosion occurs when government connections, or the power of entrenched incumbents in the market, seem to overtake genuine free and fair competition as the paths to wealth and success. Both government and big business have strong incentives to push the system in this direction, and therefore both, if left unchecked, pose a threat to America's distinctive form of capitalism.

Although the United States has the great advantage of having started from a superior model of capitalism and having developed an ideology to support it, our system is still vulnerable to these pressures — and not only in a crisis. Even the most persuasive and resilient ideology cannot long outlive the conditions and reasoning that generated it. American capitalism needs vocal defenders who understand the threats it faces — and who can make its case to the public. But in the last 30 years, as the threat of global communism has waned and disappeared, capitalism's defenders have grown fewer, while the temptations of corporatism have grown greater. This has helped set the stage for the crisis we now face — and left us less able to discern how we might recover from it.

THE DEMISE OF AMERICAN EXCEPTIONALISM

A healthy financial system is crucial to any working market economy. Widespread access to finance is essential to harnessing the best talents and allowing them to prosper and grow. It is crucial for drawing new entrants into the system, and for fostering competition. The system that allocates finance allocates power and rents; if that system is not fair, there is little hope that the rest of the economy can be. And the potential for unfairness or abuse in the financial system is always great.

Americans have long been sensitive to such abuse. While we have historically avoided general anti-capitalist biases, Americans have nonetheless nurtured something of a populist anti-finance bias. This bias has led to many political decisions throughout American history that were inefficient from an economic point of view, but helped preserve the long-term health of America's democratic capitalism. In the late 1830s, President Andrew Jackson opposed renewing the charter of the Second Bank of the United States — a move that contributed to the panic of 1837 — because he saw the bank as an instrument of political corruption and a threat to American liberties. An investigation he initiated established "beyond question that this great and powerful institution had been actively engaged in attempting to influence the elections of the public officers by means of its money."

Throughout much of American history, state bank regulations were driven by concerns about the power of New York banks over the rest of the country, and the fear that big banks drained deposits from the countryside in order to redirect them to the cities. To address these fears, states introduced a variety of restrictions: from unit banking (banks could have only one office), to limits on intrastate branching (banks from northern Illinois could not open branches in southern Illinois), to limits on interstate branching (New York banks could not open branches in other states). From a purely economic point of view, all of these restrictions were crazy. They forced a reinvestment of deposits in the same areas where they were collected, badly distorting the allocation of funds. And by preventing banks from expanding, these regulations made banks less diversified and thus more prone to failure. Nevertheless, these policies had a positive side effect: They splintered the banking sector, reducing its political power and in so doing creating the preconditions for a vibrant securities market.

Even the separation between investment banking and commercial banking introduced by the New Deal's Glass-Steagall Act was a product of this longstanding American tradition. Unlike many other banking regulations, Glass-Steagall at least had an economic rationale: to prevent commercial banks from exploiting their depositors by dumping on them the bonds of firms to which the banks had lent money, but which could not repay the loans. The Glass-Steagall Act's biggest consequence, though, was the fragmentation it caused — which helped reduce the concentration of the banking industry and, by creating divergent interests in different parts of the financial sector, helped reduce its political power.

In the last three decades, these arrangements were completely overturned, starting with the progressive deregulation of the banking sector. The restrictions imposed by state regulations were highly inefficient to begin with, but over the years technological and financial progress made them absolutely untenable. What good does it do to restrict branching when banks can set up ATMs throughout the country? How effectively can a prohibition on intrastate branching block the redistribution of deposits, when non-integrated banks can reallocate them through the interbank market?

So starting in the late 1970s, state bank regulations were relaxed or eliminated, increasing the efficiency of the banking sector and fostering economic growth. But the move also increased concentration. In 1980, there were 14,434 banks in the United States, about the same number as in 1934. By 1990, this number had dropped to 12,347; by 2000, to 8,315. In 2009, the number stands below 7,100. Most important, the concentration of deposits and lending grew significantly. In 1984, the top five U.S. banks controlled only 9% of the total deposits in the banking sector. By 2001, this percentage had increased to 21%, and by the end of 2008, close to 40%.

The apex of this process was the 1999 passage of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, which repealed the restrictions imposed by Glass-Steagall. Gramm-Leach-Bliley has been wrongly accused of playing a major role in the current financial crisis; in fact, it had little to nothing to do with it. The major institutions that failed or were bailed out in the last two years were pure investment banks — such as Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns, and Merrill Lynch — that did not take advantage of the repeal of Glass-Steagall; or they were pure commercial banks, like Wachovia and Washington Mutual. The only exception is Citigroup, which had merged its commercial and investment operations even before the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, thanks to a special exemption.

The real effect of Gramm-Leach-Bliley was political, not directly economic. Under the old regime, commercial banks, investment banks, and insurance companies had different agendas, and so their lobbying efforts tended to offset one another. But after the restrictions were lifted, the interests of all the major players in the financial industry became aligned, giving the industry disproportionate power in shaping the political agenda. The concentration of the banking industry only added to this power.

The last and most important source of the finance industry's growing power was its profitability, at least on the books. In the 1960s, the share of GDP produced by the finance sector amounted to a little more than 3%. By the mid-2000s, it was more than 8%. This expansion was driven by a rapid increase not only in profits, but also in wages. In 1980, the relative wage of a worker in the finance sector was roughly comparable to the wages of other workers with the same qualifications in other sectors. By 2007, the person in the finance sector was making 70% more. Every attempt to explain this gap using differences in abilities, or the inherent demands of the work, falls short. People working in finance were simply making significantly more than everybody else.

This enormous profitability allowed the industry to spend disproportionate amounts of money lobbying the political system. In the last 20 years, the financial industry has made $2.2 billion in political contributions, more than any other industry tracked by the Center for Responsive Politics. And over the last ten years, the financial industry topped the lobbying-expenses list, spending $3.5 billion.

The explosion of wages and profits in finance also naturally attracted the best talents — with implications that extended beyond the financial sector, and deep into government. Thirty years ago, the brightest undergraduates were going into science, technology, law, and business; for the last 20 years, they have gone to finance. Having devoted themselves to this sector, these talented individuals inevitably end up working to advance its interests: A person specialized in derivative trading is likely to be terribly impressed with the importance and value of derivatives, just as a nuclear engineer is likely to think nuclear power can solve all the world's problems. And if most of the political elite were picked from among nuclear engineers, it would be only natural that the country would soon fill with nuclear plants. In fact, we have an example of precisely this scenario in France, where for complicated cultural reasons an unusually large portion of the political elite is trained in engineering at the École Polytechnique — and France derives more of its energy from nuclear power than any other nation.

A similar effect is evident with finance in America. The proportion of people with training and experience in finance working at the highest levels of every recent presidential administration is extraordinary. Four of the last six secretaries of Treasury fit this description. In fact, all four were directly or indirectly connected to one firm: Goldman Sachs. This is hardly the historical norm; of the previous six Treasury secretaries, only one had a finance background. And finance-trained executives staff not only the Treasury but many senior White House posts and key positions in numerous other departments. President Barack Obama's chief of staff, Rahm Emanuel, once worked for an investment bank, as did his predecessor under President George W. Bush, Joshua Bolten.

There is nothing intrinsically bad about these developments. In fact, it is only natural that a government in search of the brightest people will end up poaching from the finance world, to which the best and brightest have flocked. The problem is that people who have spent their entire lives in finance have an understandable tendency to think that the interests of their industry and the interests of the country always coincide. When Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson went to Congress last fall arguing that the world as we knew it would end if Congress did not approve the $700 billion bailout, he was serious and speaking in good faith. And to an extent he was right: His world — the world he lived and worked in — would have ended had there not been a bailout. Goldman Sachs would have gone bankrupt, and the repercussions for everyone he knew would have been enormous. But Henry Paulson's world is not the world most Americans live in — or even the world in which our economy as a whole exists. Whether that world would have ended without Congress's bailout was a far more debatable proposition; unfortunately, that debate never took place.

Compounding the problem is the fact that people in government tend to rely on their networks of trusted friends to gather information "from the outside." If everyone in those networks is drawn from the same milieu, the information and ideas that flow to policymakers will be severely limited. A revealing anecdote comes from a Bush Treasury official, who noted that in the heat of the financial crisis, every time there was a phone call from Manhattan's 212 area code, the message was the same: "Buy the toxic assets." Such uniformity of advice makes it difficult for even the most intelligent or well-meaning policymakers to arrive at the right decisions.

THE VICIOUS CYCLE

The finance sector's increasing concentration and growing political muscle have undermined the traditional American understanding of the difference between free markets and big business. This means not only that the interests of finance now dominate the economic understanding of policymakers, but also — and perhaps more important — that the public's perception of the economic system's legitimacy is at risk.

If the free-market system is politically fragile, its most fragile component is precisely the financial industry. It is so fragile because it relies entirely on the sanctity of contracts and the rule of law, and that sanctity cannot be preserved without broad popular support. When people are angry to the point of threatening the lives of bankers; when the majority of Americans are demanding government intervention not only to regulate the financial industry but to control the way companies are run; when voters lose confidence in the economic system because they perceive it as fundamentally corrupt — then the sanctity of private property becomes threatened as well. And when property rights are not protected, the survival of an effective financial sector, and with it a thriving economy, is in doubt.

The government's involvement in the financial sector in the wake of the crisis — and particularly the bailouts of large banks and other institutions — has exacerbated this problem. Public mistrust of government has combined with mistrust of bankers, and concerns about the waste of taxpayer dollars have been joined to worries about rewarding those who caused the mess on Wall Street. In response, politicians have tried to save themselves by turning against the finance sector with a vengeance. That the House of Representatives approved a proposal to retroactively tax 90% of all bonuses paid by financial institutions receiving TARP money shows how dangerous this combination of backlash and demagoguery can be.

Fortunately, that particular proposal never became law. But the anti-finance climate that produced it greatly contributed, for instance, to the expropriation of Chrysler's secured creditors this spring. By singling out and publicly condemning the Chrysler creditors who demanded that their contractual rights be respected, President Obama effectively exploited public resentment to reduce the government's costs in the Chrysler bailout. But the cost-cutting came at the expense of current investors, and sent a signal to all potential future investors. While Obama's approach was convenient in the short term, it could prove devastating to the market system over time: The protection afforded to secured creditors is crucial in making credit available to firms in financial distress and even in Chapter 11. The Chrysler precedent will jeopardize access to such financing in the future, particularly for the firms most in need, and so will increase the pressure for yet more government involvement.

The pattern that has taken hold in the wake of the financial crisis thus threatens to initiate a vicious cycle. To avoid being linked in the public mind with the companies they are working to help, politicians take part in and encourage the assault on finance; this scares off legitimate investors, no longer certain they can count on contracts and the rule of law. And this, in turn, leaves little recourse for troubled businesses but to seek government assistance.

It is no coincidence that shortly after bashing Wall Street executives for their greed, the administration set up the most generous form of subsidy ever invented for Wall Street. The Public-Private Investment Program, announced in March by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, provides $84 of government-subsidized loans and $7 of government equity for every $7 of private equity invested in the purchase of toxic assets. The terms are so generous that the private investors essentially receive a subsidy of $2 for every dollar they put in.

If these terms are "justified" by the uncertainty stemming from the populist backlash, they also exacerbate the conditions that generated the backlash in the first place — confirming the sense that government and large market players are cooperating at the expense of the taxpayer and the small investor. If the Public-Private Investment Program works, the very people who created the problem stand to grow fabulously rich with government help — which will surely do no good for the public's impression of American capitalism.

This is just the unhealthy cycle in which capitalism is trapped in most countries around the world. On one hand, entrepreneurs and financiers feel threatened by public hostility, and thus justified in seeking special privileges from the government. On the other hand, ordinary citizens feel outraged by the privileges the entrepreneurs and financiers receive, inflaming that very hostility. For anyone acquainted with the character of capitalism around the world, this moment in America feels eerily familiar.

THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN CAPITALISM

We thus stand at a crossroads for American capitalism. One path would channel popular rage into political support for some genuinely pro-market reforms, even if they do not serve the interests of large financial firms. By appealing to the best of the populist tradition, we can introduce limits to the power of the financial industry — or any business, for that matter — and restore those fundamental principles that give an ethical dimension to capitalism: freedom, meritocracy, a direct link between reward and effort, and a sense of responsibility that ensures that those who reap the gains also bear the losses. This would mean abandoning the notion that any firm is too big to fail, and putting rules in place that keep large financial firms from manipulating government connections to the detriment of markets. It would mean adopting a pro-market, rather than pro-business, approach to the economy.

The alternative path is to soothe the popular rage with measures like limits on executive bonuses while shoring up the position of the largest financial players, making them dependent on government and making the larger economy dependent on them. Such measures play to the crowd in the moment, but threaten the financial system and the public standing of American capitalism in the long run. They also reinforce the very practices that caused the crisis. This is the path to big-business capitalism: a path that blurs the distinction between pro-market and pro-business policies, and so imperils the unique faith the American people have long displayed in the legitimacy of democratic capitalism.

Unfortunately, it looks for now like the Obama administration has chosen this latter path. It is a choice that threatens to launch us on that vicious spiral of more public resentment and more corporatist crony capitalism so common abroad — trampling in the process the economic exceptionalism that has been so crucial for American prosperity. When the dust has cleared and the panic has abated, this may well turn out to be the most serious and damaging consequence of the financial crisis for American capitalism.


Luigi Zingales is the Robert C. McCormack Professor of Entrepreneurship and Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business, and co-author of Saving Capitalism from the Capitalists.