

Ryan C. Smith, "The Real Oil Shock: How Oil Transformed Money, Debt, and Finance" (Palgrave MacMillan, 2022)
Aug 6, 2023
Ryan C. Smith, an economic researcher with a Ph.D. in Economic and Social History, explores the dramatic impact of oil on global finance. He discusses how the 1973 OPEC Oil Embargo and subsequent crises facilitated the rise of modern financialization. The conversation highlights shifts in wealth from industrialized nations to OPEC, creating a new debt cycle and altering financial practices. Smith also touches on the future of renewable energy and its potential to reshape finance and capitalism, showcasing the intricate connection between oil, money, and geopolitical dynamics.
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Pre-Oil Shock Finance Landscape
- Before the 1973 oil shock, finance was regulated and conservative with fixed exchange rates set by Bretton Woods.
- The Nixon Shock untethered currencies, causing volatility, but finance was still evolving toward deregulation.
Nixon Shock's Financial Impact
- The Nixon shock ended gold convertibility, destabilizing fixed exchange rates established by Bretton Woods.
- This allowed floating currencies and new volatility, enabling new speculative financial markets but required resources to develop.
1973 Oil Shock Origins
- The 1973 oil shock was triggered by OPEC's embargo after the Yom Kippur War, quadrupling oil prices almost overnight.
- The embargo combined political conflict and production cuts to create a massive global energy crisis.