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Japan, which imports 99.8% of the oil it uses, could save as much as $23 billion on crude this year, which will help offset the loss of export business it has suffered because of the rapid appreciation of the yen. Oil-using nations that are less well off will benefit too. In sub-Saharan Africa, lower expenses for transportation and farming could start to raise living standards after many years of decline. Some countries with state-owned oil companies, notably India and Pakistan, have so far refused to pass savings along to consumers, deciding instead to spend the money...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheap Oil! | 4/14/1986 | See Source »

...that low prices have erased the profit margins of many U.S. producers, forcing them to shut down their wells. While Persian Gulf countries can pump oil for less than $5 per bbl., many U.S. wells cost $12 or more per bbl. to operate because much of the easily accessible crude has already been tapped. Some oil analysts believe that one goal of the Saudi price-war strategy is to bankrupt many of these high-cost producers, wipe out the glut and then boost prices once again when the competition is gone. Most forecasters think that oil prices below...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheap Oil! | 4/14/1986 | See Source »

...odds of finding more oil are declining at the moment because tumbling prices have forced oil companies to slash their exploration and drilling budgets. Last week Ohio-based Standard Oil said that it will spend only about $450 million this year looking for crude, a 50% cut from 1985. The cutbacks affect not only the U.S., but also the allies from which it buys oil. In Britain's offshore fields, observes Petroleum Intelligence Weekly, "concern is starting to center on a spending slowdown that could leave the North Sea industry ill equipped to pick up again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Cheap Oil! | 4/14/1986 | See Source »

...sheer size of the potential petroleum "tax break" is stunning. Last year the U.S. economy consumed some 15.7 million bbl. of crude oil a day, at an average price of $27 per bbl. Total cost: $155 billion. According to the Washington Analysis Corp., an economics- and market-research firm, a petroleum price of about $10 per bbl. for the rest of 1986 would boost American disposable income by $84 billion this year, or roughly $330 for the average wage earner. More conservatively, a Department of Energy economist estimates that if the average price of crude stabilizes this year...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: More Money in Most Pockets | 4/14/1986 | See Source »

...mola that also brought the Peace Corps to San Blas. These vibrantly colored, intricately patterned, hand-stitched cloth panels are essential not only to the Kuna woman's traditional dress but to her life. From her first crude attempts at the difficult reverse applique, a Kuna woman will stitch on her mola daily, first for her trousseau, then to sell. Yet when the corps arrived in 1963, Indian women were shedding their artful garb for cheap cotton dresses, and it was feared the unique craft of the mola would be lost, along with the cash it earned the Indians...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Gone, But Not Forgotten | 4/14/1986 | See Source »

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