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Globalizing Oil (Business and Public Policy)

Globalizing Oil (Business and Public Policy)

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Llewelyn Hughes
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Reprint, 10/27/2016
EAN 9781316633052, ISBN10: 1316633055

Paperback, 268 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 1.7 cm
Language: English

Oil is the world's most important commodity. It is also one of the most politicized, with national oil companies controlling most of the world's reserves. Contrary to conventional wisdom, Llewelyn Hughes shows that governments across the advanced industrial states responded to the politicization of oil in the 1970s by freeing prices, lowering barriers to trade, and privatizing national oil companies. How did this come about? And why do some governments continue to support domestic firms? In answering these questions, Hughes shows that the politicization of oil also led to a transformation in oil market governance by changing the balance of risk and opportunities facing firms. He also shows that their ability to benefit from this change was conditioned by previous attempts to shape the competitive landscape in their favor. Hughes' study has important implications not only for the politics of oil, but also for the study of economic liberalization.

Preface
1. The puzzle of oil
2. Oil markets and the physiocratic fallacy
3. Explaining changes in oil market governance
4. Transforming French oil market governance
5. Adjusting oil market governance in Japan
6. The United States and energy independence
7. Firms, governments, and oil market governance
Appendix A. Liberalization in the advanced industrialized states.