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November 4 – November 10, 2016

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Oil peaking in five years? Gig economy creating or cannibalizing jobs?

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Special Reports / Opinion Pieces

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FT – In charts: America’s growing state of disunion – Shawn Donnan, Sam Fleming, and Lauren Leatherby 11/7

WSJ – Daily Shot: November 8, 2016

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*Note: bold emphasis is mine, italic sections are from the articles.

Will oil peak within 5 years? Nick Butler. Financial Times. 3 Nov. 2016.

“On November 2 Simon Henry, the chief financial officer of Royal Dutch Shell and one of the most respected figures in the industry, told analysts on a conference call for the Shell results presentation that he believed ‘oil demand will peak before supply and that peak may be between five and 15 years hence.'”

Why…

“Oil demand in the developed OECD world has already peaked and is 9% below the level reached in 2005. In Europe, oil demand is down 17% over the same period.”

“All the indications are that in the developed world demand has further to fall. Oil use is now heavily concentrated in the transport sector. Electric vehicles have only a fractional share of the market but the numbers are growing month by month. Technology is improving, reducing costs and expanding sales. Tesla gets most of the publicity but those wanting to understand the impact of EVs on the oil market should look at China where 188,000 new electric and hybrid vehicles were sold in 2015. This year that number is expected to more than double to around 450,000.”

“As EVs proliferate, their costs will fall until they are the natural purchase everywhere.”

The implications for the oil companies are plateaued-to-falling demand and corresponding pressure on oil pricing.

With the biggest challenge facing the “producing countries, especially those that have failed to diversify their economies, such as Russia, Nigeria, Algeria, Venezuela and, of course, Saudi Arabia. Some have such a low production cost base that they should be able to keep their market share. But with the prospect of a decline in oil use in mind many will want to maximize production quickly to extract as much revenue as possible as soon as they can. In a declining market the expectation will be that prices will stay low or fall further, removing any remaining incentive to keep oil in the ground.”

“The 20th century was the age of oil. The 21st will not be and the adjustment process for those involved could be very disruptive – destroying rentier economies built on oil revenues, changing the pattern of trade and adding another challenge to unstable and dangerous parts of the world.”

Is the Gig Economy Cannibalizing or Creating Jobs? Here’s Some Early Evidence. Mark Muro. Wall Street Journal. 3 Nov. 2016.

“Does the so-called gig economy of app-based freelancing for platforms like Uber or TaskRabbit complement or ‘cannibalize’ more conventional payroll work? Given the sketchiness of the data available, it’s been hard to tell.”

“All in all… the online freelance marketplaces may well gain workers at the expense of competing payroll businesses in some industries, particularly where incumbents are struggling in weaker markets or fail to respond with better service.”

“All of this is important because of the rise of online temping, freelancing and independent contracting has huge implications for the circumstances of workers and families in cities.”

“To begin with, the scale of the trend is enormous. In this regard, the spread of new, gig-based business models for linking workers to work isn’t just a limited scale, vanguard development. Instead, the changes affecting a few hundred thousand workers in the rides and rooms industries are a tiny part of a pervasive, economywide move toward nontraditional freelance, contract or temporary work arrangements in dozens of industries. And the number of workers involved is huge. Overall, there may be as many as 68 million ‘independent’ workers in the U.S., according to a new estimate by the McKinsey Global Institute. Within a decade, nearly half of all employed Americans may be employed this way. So the size of the trend alone underscores the need to pay attention.”

“Beyond that, the shift to alternative work arrangements matters for policy makers because it represents a fundamental reorientation of the social contract within which millions of Americans work. Most notably, the rise of online temping, freelancing and independent contracting means that millions of workers increasingly lack access to the once-ubiquitous labor standards that defined the ‘good jobs’ economy that came out of the New Deal era. Gig workers, for example, retain limited access to income security protections, such as unemployment insurance, workers’ compensation and disability payments. Minimum-wage and antidiscrimination laws may not apply to such contractors, nor do they often receive retirement benefits such as Social Security. And for that matter access to credit, training and credentialing becomes even more tenuous than elsewhere in the economy.”

“In short, the expansion of the gig economy-left to itself-is likely going to contribute to larger trends that are reducing the share of American workers that can achieve basic economic security through their work.”

Other Interesting Articles

Bloomberg Businessweek

The Economist

Bloomberg – Banks Passed Up Uber Share Sale on Lack of Data 11/7

FT – The Cohen model of making billions loses its appeal 11/4

FT – China replaces finance minister Lou Jiwei 11/6

FT – Japanese investors grapple with wedding versus funeral bet 11/7

FT – Vices and virtues of Uber’s insolence 11/7

FT – What does China’s latest intervention mean for Hong Kong? 11/7

FT – The Hillary Clinton hate campaign has twisted America 11/7

FT – Mozambicans feel the pinch as ‘tuna bond’ debt crisis deepens 11/7

FT – Oil demand might peak in just over a decade, says Opec 11/8

FT – China card curbs stem cash flow to Hong Kong insurance plans 11/8

FT – Lessons from the Mozambique meltdown 11/8

FT – Sports rights: The fight to keep the fans on side 11/8

FT – Infineon breaks Rubik’s Cube world record 11/9

NYT – Young Adolescents as Likely to Die From Suicide as From Traffic Accidents 11/3

NYT – Turkey’s Post-Coup Crackdown Targets Kurdish Politicians 11/4

NYT – ‘We Almost Have Riots’: Tensions Flare in Silicon Valley Over Growth 11/4

WSJ – China Faces Looming Bulge in Currency Pressure 11/4

WSJ – Office Pileup Gets Worse in Houston 11/8

WSJ – Warning Light Flashes on Auto Loans 11/8

WSJ – With Financing Scarce, Chinese Developers Get Too Clever by Half 11/10

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