China is looking at raising the price of oil products after the Olympics. I can’t wait to see what happens. An article from China Daily makes the point that oil prices fell the day that China announced its last price increase. What the article fails to mention is that the next day the oil price rebounded as traders realized that because the price was so low, Chinese refineries were not processing raw oil at their full capacity, and there was unmet demand for refined products. When the price rose, refineries refined more to meet the unmet demand, which clearly still existed even at the higher price.
I will be interested to see how Chinese oil consumption moves with government price controls lifted or loosened. I’m betting on an oil price spike. Clearly I’m a cheer leader for higher oil prices, but here is my justification. There is likely still a great deal of unmet demand for energy products amongst China’s new rich. If prices are left to the market, or closer to it, supplies of energy products will increase, thus driving up demand. The places where prices would bite the most are at lower levels of income. Because this fuel consumption is much less optional for the poorest in society, the Chinese government will have to subsidize this consumption in some manner. This will mean little in the way of negative consumption due to higher prices, but in fact will create additional demand, as products become supplied at the higher equilibrium price in sufficient quantities to eliminate excess demand.
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