Between 1973 and 1980, the cost of crude oil rose suddenly and dramatically, precipitating convulsions in international politics. Conventional wisdom holds that international capital markets adjusted automatically and remarkably well: Enormous amounts of money flowed into oil-rich states, and efficient markets then placed that new money in cash-poor Third World economies. This massive reallocation of wealth is labeled petrodollar recycling. David Spiro has followed the money trail, and the story he tells, based on interviews and a painstaking accumulation of fragmentary evidence, contradicts the accepted beliefs both in the particulars and in broad outline. Most of the sudden flush of new oil wealth did not go to poor oil-importing countries around the globe. Instead the United States made a deal with Saudi Arabia to sell it U.S. securities in secret, a deal resulting in a substantial portion of Saudi assets being held by the U.S. government. With this arrangement, the U.S. government violated its agreements with allies in the developed world. Spiro argues that American policy makers took this action to prop up otherwise intolerable levels of U.S. public debt. In effect, recycled OPEC wealth subsidized the debt-happy policies of the U.S. government as well as the debt-happy consumerism of its citizenry.
The Political Economy of International Finance
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Gunter to Witteveen, November 25, 1975, folder “C- Egypt-810 Mission Gunter and Staff Oct.– Nov. 1975,” box 6, CFE, CFC, IMFA. 83. Martijn Paijmans to McNamara, April 19, 1976, folder “Contacts with member countries; ...
... Hidden Hand of American Hegemony, p. 122. US Treasury Department, 'Movements in the Relative Purchasing Power of OPEC Dollar Denominated Assets', mimeo, 23 October 1978. Spiro, Hidden Hand of American Hegemony, pp. 122–3. Ibid., p.
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