We call it corruption but really it is not. Individuals find themselves in a position to create title and from that they are in a position to charge rents for access to that title. Nice work if you can get it as any mid western farmer can tell you. The only difference elsewhere is that the local farmer is not often allowed ownership of those rights and we are left with cutting a deal with the President's brother.
Since nothing otherwise would actually be created without this process emerging somehow, it is best to accept it and establish a state royalty scheme that ensures proper sharing with the state. The only thing that makes this bit of normal private government enterprise unique is the possibility of windfall success which makes everyone jealous and fraught with unwelcome greed.
No one ever asked for their fair share of the dry hole costs incurred often for decades.
The Secret World of Oil
By Jessica Ovington, NewAmerica.net | July 26, 2014
http://www.theepochtimes.com/n3/816130-the-secret-world-of-oil/
Oil powers our cars and our economy. But it’s also a fuel source
for bribery and corruption across the globe. Ken Silverstein, an
award-winning investigative journalist and former Washington editor of
Harper’s Magazine, shines a light on the industry’s darkest secrets in
his new book, “The Secret World of Oil”. In this Squaring Off, we ask
Silverstein five questions about what he discovered during his
investigation, and what we can do to fight back against corrupt oil
tycoons.
Q1: You argue that the oil industry is actually the most corrupt industry in the world. How?
Since the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act was passed in 1977, there
have been more bribery cases involving the energy industry than any
other sector. The energy business has also been hit with greater collective fines under the FCPA than any other industry.
If you’re selling widgets, you make a small amount of money on a lot
of contracts. When you’re in the oil business, you’re chasing a small
number of huge deals that can be worth tens of billions of dollars.
“Corruption isn’t endemic in the energy business because people in the
industry are more corrupt or have lower morals but because you’re
dealing with huge sums of capital,” Keith Myers, a London-based
consultant and former BP executive, told me. “A million dollars here or
there doesn’t make any difference to the overall economics of a project,
but it can make a huge difference to the economics of a few individuals
who can delay or stop or approve the project.”
Q2: As consumers, how much responsibility do we have in the
oil industry’s success? Which questions should we be asking, and of
whom?
On the one hand, consumers have a lot of responsibility because we’re
driving demand for oil – for example, we want gasoline to fuel our
SUVs. And as a former Chevron executive told me, “As long as we want
cheap gas, democracy can’t exist,” meaning that we import oil from many
corrupt, authoritarian regimes and so we’re propping up those regimes
with our money. But elected officials set policies and so the questions
need to be addressed to government. As to what the questions should be,
there are far too many, but here are a few: Why does the government
continue to so lavishly subsidize the
oil and gas industries? Should the government more aggressively
discourage oil consumption with higher taxes and stricter fuel
standards? Why is the energy industry exempt from every major piece of
environmental legislation passed during the last forty years? Do we
really need to support or abet every oil-rich dictatorship out there or
are there some regimes (hint: Equatorial Guinea, Turkmenistan) that are
beyond the pale and where political and trade ties should be reduced to a
minimum?
Q3: Wouldn’t there still be an unwavering demand for fossil
fuels regardless of increased industry transparency? So, in theory,
does this corruption really matter all that much in regard to the future
of global warming?
No, it doesn’t because as you say, reducing corruption is not going
to reduce demand so there’s no direct link to global warming.
Q4: Who would benefit from increased transparency in the oil industry? Would there be any obvious benefits for consumers?
There’s probably not a huge benefit to consumers from a strictly
economic standpoint. The price of gasoline is not going to plummet if
bribery (legal or otherwise) is eliminated because it’s a small
component of overall costs. The primary beneficiaries would be people in
oil producing countries because at the moment citizens of many of those
states have no idea how their governments spend their energy revenues.
Four years ago Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Act, which includes a
provision (Section 1504) that requires oil, gas and mining companies to
disclose their payments to governments. It still hasn’t been implemented
because of opposition from industry, which essentially argues that it
would hurt American companies’ “competitiveness” abroad because Russian
and Chinese firms won’t have to provide the same information.
Transparency is not a cure-all — some governments are pretty clear about
how much oil revenue they are taking in, they’re just not clear on how
the money is being spent – but it makes it a bit harder for governments
to steal money. It’s hard to argue with that.
Q5: Are there specific organizations or individuals working
to expose the industry’s corruption? If so, what can we do to support
them in their fight?
There
are lots of great organizations out there. I’d highlight Global Witness
(which is based in London and has offices in DC): It does original,
first-rate investigations about corruption in the natural resources
industry – work as good as anything being done at top media
investigative units. Human Rights Watch also does amazing investigations
about corruption in the energy industry.
There’s a Swiss outfit called the Berne Declaration that does a great job tracking the commodities business. With the traditional media business retracting, the work of groups like these are more and more important.
There’s a Swiss outfit called the Berne Declaration that does a great job tracking the commodities business. With the traditional media business retracting, the work of groups like these are more and more important.
Jessica Ovington graduated in 2013 from the University of Georgia
with a B.A. in International Affairs and will be attending King’s
College London for their Intelligence & International Security
master’s program in the fall of 2014. She was an editorial intern at New
America.
This article was republished from The Weekly Wonk, New America‘s digital magazine. Read the original on the New America website.
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