TESTIMONY BY DR. GAL LUFT
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
INSTITUTE FOR THE ANALYSIS OF GLOBAL SECURITY
(IAGS)
Presented before
HOUSE COMMITTEE ON FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Sovereign Wealth
Funds, Oil and the New World Economic Order
May 21, 2008
Mr. Chairman, members of the Committee, less than a decade ago Washington was consumed by a debate on what would be the best policy to absorb the then multi-billion dollar federal surplus. Reductions in outstanding debt, tax cuts and spending increases were the most touted solutions. The least popular policy was for the government to invest the accumulated excess balances in private-sector financial markets. Former Office of Management and Budget (OMB) Director Alice Rivlin wrote in 1992, “No good would come of making the government a big shareholder in private companies or the principal owner of state and local bonds.” Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan said in a 1999 testimony that federal investment in the private sector “would arguably put at risk the efficiency of our capital markets and thus our economy.” Two years later, on January 25, 2001, he underscored this point at a Senate Budget Committee hearing: “The federal government should eschew private asset accumulation because it would be exceptionally difficult to insulate the government's investment decisions from political pressures. Thus, over time, having the federal government hold significant amounts of private assets would risk sub-optimal performance by our capital markets, diminished economic efficiency, and lower overall standards of living than would be achieved otherwise.” These words are worth remembering today as we are again facing a similar dilemma about what to do with government surpluses just that this time it is not our own government’s surplus that knocks on the door of our financial system but that of some of the world’s least democratic, least transparent and least friendly governments.
The rise of sovereign wealth funds (SWF) as new power
brokers in the world economy should not be looked at as a singular phenomenon
but rather as part of what can be defined a new economic world order. This new
order has been enabled by several mega-trends which operate in a
self-reinforcing manner, among them the meteoric rise of developing Asia,
accelerated globalization, the rapid flow of information and the sharp increase
in the price of oil by a delta of over $100 per barrel in just six years which
has enabled Russia and OPEC members to accumulate unprecedented wealth and
elevate themselves to the position of supreme economic powers. Oil-rich
countries of OPEC and
The resulting transfer of wealth from consumers to exporters has already caused the following macroeconomic trends:
1. Regressive tax on the world economy. As a result in the rise in oil prices consuming countries face economic dislocations such as swollen trade deficits, loss of jobs, sluggish economic growth, inflation and, if prices continue to soar, inevitable recessions. The impact on developing countries, many which still carry debts from the previous oil shocks of the 1970s, is the most severe. Three-digit-oil will undoubtedly slow down their economic growth and exacerbate existing social illnesses; it would also make them economically and politically dependent on some of the world’s most nasty petro-regimes.
2. Change in the direction of the flow of capital. Historically the flow of capital has always been from industrialized countries to the developing ones. The rise in oil prices coupled with growing dependence on oil and other commodities by the industrialized world have reversed this course and today it is the developing world which feeds the industrialized world with capital.
3. Change in ownership patterns. During the post-Cold
War era, there has been a decline in direct state ownership of business and a
significant strengthening of the private sector. Throughout the world private
businesses took ownership over what were once state-owned companies. In some
cases, like
In this context, we should view SWF as enablers of
the new economic order. SWF are pouring billions into hedge funds, private
equity funds, real estate, natural resources and other nodes of the West's
economy. No one knows precisely how much money is held by SWF but it is
estimated that they currently own $3.5 trillion in assets and within one decade they could balloon to
$10-15 trillion, equivalent to
Before I delve into the specific issues related to SWF, I
would like to remind the Committee that those funds are not the only way states
can exert influence in global financial markets. High net worth individuals,
government controlled companies and central banks are just as important in this
context. Each one of the governments which are concentrating wealth has a
different portfolio of investment instruments.
The second thing to bear in mind is that to date there has been little evidence that SWF attempt to
assume control of firms they invest in or use their wealth to advance political
ends. This is perhaps why so many experts dismiss the fear of foreign
money acquiring portions of Western economies as a new form of jingoism,
deriding the “fear mongers” as disciples of those who propelled the
“Japanese-are-coming” hysteria of the 1980s. I do not share their dismissive
view. The key issue to understand is that there is a
fundamental difference between state vs. private ownership, and that because
governments operate differently from other private sector players, their
investments should be governed by rules designed accordingly. Unlike ordinary
shareholders and high net wealth private investors who are motivated solely by
the desire to maximize the value of their shares, governments have a broader
agenda—to maximize their geopolitical influence and sometime to promote
ideologies that are in essence anti-Western. Non-democratic and non-transparent
governments can allow the use of their intelligence agencies and other covert
as well as overt instruments of power to acquire valuable commercial
information. Unlike pure commercial enterprises, state owned investment funds
can leverage the political and financial power of their governments to promote
their business interests. Governments may enter certain transactions in order
to extract a certain technology or alternatively in order to ‘kill’ a competing
one. The reason the
Mr. Chairman, from an
international relations perspective most of the concerns raised about SWF only
really matter if in the years to come the relations between the
Despite the attention given to SWF, they are still relatively small players in the global economic system. Their assets exceed the $1.4 trillion managed by hedge funds but they are far below the $15 trillion managed by pension funds, the $16 trillion managed by insurance companies or the $21 trillion managed by investment companies. Here again it is more important to look at the trend rather than the present situation. At their current growth rate of 24 percent a year SWF are beginning to present tough competition to other institutional investors over access to investment opportunities. To understand the anatomy of the competition between government entities and commercial firms one needs only to observe the process in which International Oil Companies (IOC) have gradually lost their competitive edge vis-à-vis National Oil companies (NOC). IOCs find themselves unable to compete against the deep-pocketed NOCs which do not face the same regulatory limitations, do not have to provide the same measures of transparency and do not have to abide by stringent environmental and humanitarian constraints. As SWF gain strength and volume they could sideline other players vying for investments. Unlike pension funds and other institutional investors who are slow in their decision making process, following strict timelines set by their investment committees, SWF are agile. They have the in-house structure and the resources to make investment decisions quickly.
New economic balance of power
No doubt perpetual high oil prices will shift the economic
balance between OPEC and the West in the direction of those who own the
precious commodity. As Robert Zubrin points out in his book Energy Victory, in
1972 the

Vulnerable sectors. SWF have lost $25 billion on their recent
investments in struggling banks and securities firms worldwide. In the near
future, they are not likely to be as enthusiastic to bail out additional
financial institutions. But with high oil prices here to stay and with the International Energy Agency projecting that “we are
ending up with 95 percent of the world relying for its economic well being on
decisions made by five or six countries in the Middle East,” it is hard
to see how OPEC’s massive buying power would not upset the West’s economic and
political sovereignty. This is particularly true in
light of the prospects of potential future bailouts in sectors other than
banking should the
Media organizations are another sector worthy of attention.
In September 2006, with mainstream news organizations
in the U.S. reporting falling earnings and downbeat financial
assessments, information ministers, tycoons and other
officials of the 57-nation Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC)
gathered in Saudi Arabia where OIC Secretary General Ekmeleddin
Ihsanoglu urged them to buy stakes in Western media
outlets to help correct what he views as misconceptions on Islam around the world. To date, though private investors from
the
Opaque investment patterns and the risk of predatory
behavior. When it comes to governance, transparency and accountability SWF
are not cut from the same cloth. There is a profound difference between SWF of
democratic countries like
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Boardroom presence. To date, the influx of petrodollars has not translated into overbearing presence of government agents in corporate boardrooms. In fact, many of the SWF buy holdings under the 5 percent benchmark that triggers regulatory scrutiny and forego board seats. But at the current rate of investment and many more years of three-digit-oil combined with deepening geopolitical tensions, foreign governments might be more willing to translate their wealth into power, dictating business practices, vetoing deals, appointing officers sympathetic to their governments and dismissing those who are critical of them. Direct influence of foreign government could lead to inefficiencies, capital misallocations and political interference in business decisions. This is why it is my view that SWF acquisitions should be restricted to non-voting stakes.
The rise of Sharia finance. The gradual penetration of Shariah (Islamic Law) into
West’s corporate world is another characteristic of the new geo-economic order.
Islamic countries operating on the basis of compliance with Shariah have strict
guidelines of economic conduct. Banks and investment houses gradually employ a
new breed of executive--the Chief Shariah Officer (CSO)--whose sole job is to
ensure compliance with Islamic law and hence attract more business from the Muslim
investors. Over time, such compliance could put pressure on companies not
consistent with Islamic principles to become more “Islamic.” Imams sitting on
Shariah boards could be pressured to withhold their approval of any business
dealing directly or indirectly connected with countries or institutions that
are offensive to Islam. One can only guess what this would mean for publishing
houses, Hollywood movie studios, the alcohol and gambling industries. A sure
casualty of the Islamization of the corporate world would be Israel, which has
for years been subjected to the Arab boycott. According to the U.S. Department
of Commerce, last year, American companies reported no fewer than 486 requests
from UAE companies alone to boycott Israel.
Building a fireless firewall
None of the potential risks to which I alluded entails lifting the drawbridge and becoming economic hermits. America’s commitment to open markets has been a source of respect and admiration around the world and reversing it through investment protectionism would only hurt U.S. prestige while undermining economic growth and job creation at home. To arrest the current economic trend and to hedge the risk of sovereignty loss the U.S. should apply a healthy dosage of vigilance and develop a system of indicators to determine and examine when SWF pursue different approaches from other institutional investors. Willingness to pay above market prices, use government assets to back up financial deals or manipulate prices to increase returns should all be red flags that trigger response. The U.S. already has a rigorous safeguard mechanisms against undesirable foreign investors. The Committee on Foreign Investment in the U.S. (CFIUS) protects national security assets in sectors such as telecommunications, broadcasting, transportation, energy and minerals in which there is a clear potential danger to national security. I am delighted that many of the concerns about foreign investments have already been addressed in the CFIUS reform legislation entitled the Foreign Investment and National Security Act of 2007. The range of regulatory and supervisory tools available to the Federal Reserve Board as described in the Federal Reserve Act are quite satisfactory for the case SWF make an investment in a U.S. banking organization that triggers one of the Fed’s thresholds. But in order to protect ourselves against sovereignty loss more safeguards are needed.
Reciprocity. While enjoying almost unlimited access to investment opportunities in the West, oil rich governments do not feel the need to reciprocate by opening their economies to foreign investment. The opposite is true: they obstruct international companies from investing in their midst limiting them to, at best, minority share. This is the root cause of insufficient production of new oil. Oil countries, together owning 80 percent of the world’s reserves, practice resource nationalism, stick to quotas, refuse to provide transparency of oil activities including reserve studies and terms of contract with their own national oil companies and they are riddled with corruption and cronyism.
The least we can do is demand that foreigners treat us as we treat them. Despite being the lead violator of free trade by dint of its leadership of the OPEC cartel, three years ago, with U.S. support, the Saudis were admitted to the World Trade Organization (WTO). This was a terrible mistake. Since the admission, the world’s generosity toward the Saudis was rewarded with nothing but continuous manipulation of oil prices and behavior that can only be described as antithetical to free trade. Enjoying the benefits of free trade is an earned privilege not an entitlement, and foreign governments wishing to acquire assets in the West should be obliged only if they show similar hospitality to Western companies. We should not be shy to use retaliatory measures against serial violators of free trade principles. There are currently four OPEC members in waiting to accede to the WTO --Algeria, Iran, Iraq, and Libya. Oil producing countries with growing SWF like Russia, Kazakhstan and Azerbaijan are also on the waiting list. These countries’ admittance to the organization should be contingent on compliance with those principles and on an unequivocal commitment to refrain from non-competitive behavior and anti-market activities. You cannot seek a seat at the WTO and at the same time promote a natural gas cartel.
Increase transparency. The scope and growth rate of SWF are so vast that their actions can have far-reaching influence on world financial markets whether intentionally or mistakenly. This begs for the introduction of intermediary asset managers and the creation of disclosure standards for SWF as well as other foreign institutional investors that are at least as stringent as those applied to other regulated investors. However, any go-it-alone effort to force SWF to adopt higher transparency standards would be unworkable and easy to circumvent. The guidelines of working with SWF should therefore be drawn in collaboration with the EU and other countries on the receiving end of sovereign money.
Break the oil cartel. In the long run, the only way to roll back the
new economic order and restrain OPEC’s control over the world economy is to
reduce the inherent value of its commodity. This cannot be done as long as we
continue to put on our roads cars that can run on nothing but petroleum. Every
year 17 million new cars roll onto America’s roads. Each of these cars will
have a lifespan of nearly 17 years. In the next Congressional session 35
million new cars will be added. If the next president presides for two terms he
or she will preside over the introduction of 150 million new cars. If we allow
all those cars to be gasoline only we are locking our future to petroleum for
decades to come. I cannot think of something more detrimental to America’s
security than Congress allowing this to happen. Congress can break OPEC’s
monopoly over the transportation sector by instituting fuel choice. The
cheapest, easiest and most immediate step should be a federal Open Fuel
Standard, requiring that every new car put on the
road be a flex fuel car, which looks and operates exactly like a gasoline car
but has a $100 feature which enables it to run on any combination of gasoline
and alcohol. Millions of flex fuel cars will begin to roll back oil’s influence
by igniting a boom of innovation and investment in alternative fuel
technologies. The West is not rich in oil, but it is blessed with a wealth of
other energy sources from which alcohol fuels - such as ethanol and methanol – capable
of powering flexible fuel vehicles, can be affordably and cleanly generated.
Among them: vast rich farmland, hundreds of years' worth of coal reserves, and
billions of tons a year of agricultural, industrial and municipal waste. Even
better: in an alcohol economy, scores of poor developing countries which right
now struggle under the heavy economic burden caused by high oil prices would be
able to become net energy exporters. With hot climate and long rainy seasons
countries in south Asia, Africa and Latin America enjoy the perfect conditions
for the production of sugarcane ethanol, which costs roughly half the price and
is five times more efficient than corn ethanol. Hence, a shift to alcohol
enabled cars will enable developing countries to generate revenues and emerge
as a powerful force that could break OPEC’s dominance over the global
transportation sector.
In addition to alcohols, coal, nuclear power,
solar and wind energy can make electricity to power pure electric and plug-in
hybrid cars. The latter have an internal combustion engine and fuel tank, and
thus are not limited in size, power, or range, but also have a battery that can
be charged from an electric socket and can power 20-40 miles of driving, giving
the consumer the choice of driving on electricity or liquid fuel. Only 2% of
U.S. electricity is generated from oil today. While plug-in hybrids have
unlimited range and a cost premium of several thousand dollars, pure electric
cars are planned to be sold at competitive prices in several countries,
including the U.S. and Japan, as early as 2010. Because pure electric cars have
a range limitation—at least two countries, Israel and Denmark, are now in the
process of developing an infrastructure for battery replacement to address this
problem— they may not satisfy the needs of many Americans. But electric cars
can easily serve as a second or third family car. This “niche market” is
roughly two thirds of America. Thirty one percent of America’s
households own two cars and an additional 35 percent own three or more
vehicles. These are not the cars a family would use to visit grandma out of
town but cars that drive routinely well below the full battery range. There are
over 75 million households in the U.S. that own more than one vehicle and that can
potential replace one or more gasoline only cars with cars with cars powered by
made-in-America electricity.
Mr. Chairman, the new economic order is shaping up right before our eyes increasingly invalidating much of the economic paradigm to which we have been accustomed. For America, a continuation of the petroleum standard guarantees economic decline and perpetual economic and political enslavement to the OPEC cartel and its whims. If we want to address the challenge of SWF and increased foreign government control over our economy we must focus on policies that can empower countries that share our values rather than the petro-dictators of the world. We must bring down the price of oil before it hits a critical point beyond which sovereignty loss becomes inevitable.