Editorial
Commentary
Bush, First and Flynn :
A legal case against the OPEC cartel
As the national average price of gasoline raced toward $4 a gallon and
airlines laid off workers by the thousands because of rising jet fuel
costs, the US House of Representatives took action: It overwhelmingly
passed the Gas Price Relief for Consumers Act of 2008.
The
bill would have made it illegal for foreign states "to act collectively" to
limit the production or distribution of oil. Put simply, the bill permitted
the Justice Department to charge the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries with violating American antitrust laws.
Even before the 324-to-84 House vote in May, President Bush pledged a
veto, saying OPEC might retaliate against US interests overseas or cut
oil production further. But Senate Republicans held the line for him, this
month threatening a filibuster that Democrats couldn't break. That effectively
killed the bill and, for now, any hope that the US would finally start
treating oil the same way it does computer chips, vitamins, and other products.
OPEC
may call itself an "organization," but it
is, pure and simple, a cartel that manipulates markets, restricts output,
and fixes
prices. The US and the European Union have vigorously prosecuted other
multinational cartels for doing the same thing in other markets.
Swiss healthcare company F. Hoffmann-La Roche, for instance, paid a $500
million fine to the US in 1999 for its part in a years-long scheme to raise
prices on vitamin products. Just last year, British Airways and Korean
Air each paid a $300 million fine to the US for fixing international cargo
rates.
But
when it comes to oil, the US gets squeamish. For nearly 50 years, the
members
of OPEC have openly operated as a cartel. OPEC's
statutory
provisions even state that its mission is "the coordination and unification
of the petroleum policies of member countries and the determination of
the best means for safeguarding their interests, individually and collectively."
The cartel's economic effect on the US has been devastating, dating from
the oil embargo in the 1970s, which led to the first US fuel shortage since
World War II, to today's unstoppable escalation of pump prices. US spending
on imported oil has gone from about $185 billion a year to an expected
$440 billion in 2008. Much of that excess is winding up in the pockets
of OPEC members, increasing their global economic and political power.
High gas prices have now gone from consumer irritation to a serious threat
to our national economic health. Our antitrust laws are tailor-made to
help out in such a crisis.
OPEC
is clearly a "combination or conspiracy" that
restrains trade in violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act. Still, over
the years,
courts have made it nearly impossible to use the act against OPEC, whose
members claim they are sovereign nations and thus immune from such prosecution.
But
OPEC's behavior is commercial, not governmental or diplomatic. It is
perfectly
appropriate for Congress to remove these
legal obstacles.
Foreign businesses and individuals have long been subject to US antitrust
laws – even for conduct overseas, if it has substantial effect on
commerce here. So should OPEC.
Imagine suing OPEC members for the amount they overcharged for petroleum
products the US government purchased. Imagine the seizure of OPEC assets
to pay this award, such as Venezuelan government-owned Citgo headquarters
in Houston or Saudi Arabia's Aramco assets in New York.
And imagine Justice Department officials compelling OPEC and its coconspirators
to disclose documents that might bring to light exactly how this cartel
has functioned. Might this information show a relationship between OPEC
and US oil companies?
If we are afraid of OPEC, remember that our decades of putting up with
this cartel have done nothing to reduce oil prices.
The bill Congress proposed was actually somewhat cautious. It didn't allow
private suits for damages but gave enforcement jurisdiction exclusively
to the Justice Department. Under the Bush administration, the attorney
general seems unlikely to have used this authority anyway, but all that
could change come January, when a new president and new Congress get to
work.
Job One for them should be to look past the fearmongering rhetoric and
enact this important piece of legislation.
At
the very least, passage of this bill would send this loud and clear message
to
OPEC: Competition – the basis of free enterprise and economic
organization throughout much of the world – ought to be the norm
for producing oil just as it is for producing anything else.
Darren
Bush, Harry First, and John J. Flynn are law professors at the
University of
Houston, New York University, and University of
Utah, respectively. Petroleumworld
does not necessarily share these views.
Editor's
Note: This commentary was originally published byThe Christian Science
Monitor, on 06/23/2007. Petroleumworld reprint this article in the interest
of our
readers.
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Petroleumworld
News 06/27/08
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