The great demand for oil price forecasts has resulted in extensive discussion of possible behavioral and structural relationships to describe this jerky market. On the supply side, much attention has been focused on the inner life of OPEC. Is it or not a cartel? Is it a cartel with a competitive fringe? How strong is the tension between high and low absorbers? Are the depletion policies derived from myopic cash requirements or from long-term optimization schemes?
AperjisD. (1982). The Oil Market in the 1980s. Cambridge, Mass.: Ballinger Publishing Company.
2.
ChaoΗ. P.ManneA. (1983). “Oil Stockpiles and Import Reductions: A Dynamic Programming Approach.” Operations Research31 (A).
3.
DalyG.GriffinJ.SteeleH. (1983). “The Future of OPEC: Price Level and Cartel Stability.” The Energy Journal4(1): 65-77.
4.
FesharakiF.HoffmannS. L. (1983). Determinants of OPEC Supplies: Physical, Economic and Political Factors. Honolulu: Resource Systems Institute, East-West Center.
5.
JacobyH. D.PaddockJ. L. (1983). World Oil Prices and Economic Growth in the 1980s. The Energy Journal4(2): 31-47.
6.
JohanyA. D. (1980. The Myth of the OPEC Cartel. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
7.
KourisG. (1981). “Elasticities—Science or Fiction?” Energy Economics (April).
8.
LorentsenL.RolandK. (1984). “Modelling the Crude Oil Market: Oil Prices in the Long Term.” Paper presented at the IX Triennial World Congress of IFAC Budapest: (July).