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from.– Oil Crisis...is
the world about to be shocked
Putin: Why Not Price Oil in
Euros?
By Catherine Belton - Moscow Times
President Vladimir Putin said Thursday Russia could switch its trade in
oil from dollars to euros, a move that could have far-reaching
repercussions for the global balance of power -- potentially hurting the
U.S. dollar and economy and providing a massive boost to the euro zone.
"We do not rule out that it is possible. That would be interesting for
our European partners," Putin said at a joint news conference with
German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder in the Urals town of Yekaterinburg,
where the two leaders conducted two-day talks. "But this does not depend
solely on us. We do not want to hurt prices on the market," he said. "Putin's
putting a big card on the table," said Youssef Ibrahim, managing
director of the Strategic Energy Investment Group in Dubai and a member
of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations, an influential body of leading
world thinkers thought to help set the United States' foreign policy
agenda. "In the context of what is happening worldwide, this statement
is very important," he said.
Putin's words come in the wake of a protracted drive by the EU to
attract more countries' trade and currency reserves into euros, in a bid
to chip away at U.S. hegemony over the global economy and money supply.
A move by Russia, as the world's second largest oil exporter, to trade
oil in euros, could provoke a chain reaction among other oil producers
currently mulling a switch and would further boost the euro's gradually
growing share of global currency reserves. That would be a huge boon to
the euro zone economy and potentially catastrophic for the United
States. Dollar-based global oil trade now gives the United States carte
blanche to print dollars without sparking inflation -- to fund huge
expenses on wars, military build-ups, and consumer spending, as well as
cut taxes and run up huge trade deficits.
Almost two-thirds of the world's currency reserves are kept in dollars,
since oil importers pay in dollars and oil exporters keep their reserves
in the currency they are paid in. This effectively provides the U.S.
economy with an interest-free loan, as these dollars can be invested
back into the U.S. economy with zero currency risk. If a Russian move to
the euro were to prompt other oil producers to do the same, it could be
a "catastrophe" for the United States, Ibrahim said. "There are already
a number of countries within OPEC that would prefer to trade in euros."
Iran, the world's No. 5 oil exporter, has also openly mulled a move into
euros. And after the war in Iraq, there is growing debate in the United
States' traditional ally Saudi Arabia on a switch too, though its
government has not come down firmly on one side, Ibrahim said. "There is
a revision going on of its strategic relationship with the United
States. Already, they're buying more [French-made] Airbuses," he said.
"The Saudi Crown Prince [Abdullah Bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud]'s visit to
Russia was of great significance and the regime is talking about closer
cooperation with LUKoil and other Russian companies." Under Saddam
Hussein, Iraqi oil was traded in euros. "This was another reason [why
the U.S. attacked]," Ibrahim said. "There is a great political dimension
to this. Slowly more power and muscle is moving from the United States
to the EU, and that's mainly because of what happened in Iraq," he said.
Putin had previously brought up the proposal to switch to euros as prime
minister in October 1999, at a meeting of EU leaders in Helsinki. Then,
in an attempt to forge a new bloc to counterbalance the United States,
he made the proposal alongside calling for closer cooperation between
Russia and the EU, including on security issues. Since then, however,
Russia's ties with the United States have warmed considerably -- and it
is unclear whether Putin would risk damaging that relationship by going
ahead with the euro move, analysts said. "Putin is very much interested
in changing the structure of OPEC and he cannot do that without the
United States," said Alexander Rahr, an expert on Russia at the German
Council on Foreign Relations. "He can only get a foothold for Russia in
the Middle East with [U.S. help]. And, he wants to get contracts for the
Russian oil industry in Iraq -- for this, too, he needs the United
States."
Some analysts said that the statement appeared to be aimed at boosting
Russia's global clout on the world stage. "Putin is trying to create a
position for Russia as an independent player. But his aim is not to
undermine relations [with the United States]. He just wants to boost
Russia's position up from being a junior partner," said Dmitry Trenin,
geopolitical analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center. Yevgeny Gavrilenkov,
chief economist at Troika Dialog and an earlier architect of the Putin
government's first economic plan, said debate is growing on a move to
the euro as Russia mulls siding with the EU. "Such an idea is really
possible," he said. "Why not? More than half of Russia's oil trade is
with Europe. But there will be great opposition to this from the United
States." He said that while a switch would have no direct impact on the
Russian economy, it would give a great boost to the euro zone.
Lukoil vice president Leonid Fedun said Thursday that he saw no problem
in the euro switch and that payments for such transactions would be
minimal, at just 0.08 percent. "There is no problem ... If the state
decides to do this, then we will support this initiative. From the point
of view of the economy, there's no difference," Interfax quoted him as
saying. But even Fedun could not help putting a political price tag on
the move. "We are ready to move to the euro if the country will be
included in a visa-free regime with Europe," he said. Rahr agreed that
the timing of the statement seemed calculated to extract political
concessions from the EU. "It's a bargaining chip," he said. Gavrilenkov
suggested Putin was also angling for EU concessions on other issues
discussed in Yekaterinburg, such as terms for Russia's WTO accession.
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