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The narrative that being a net oil producer insulates the U.S. is false. The U.S. market is deeply integrated globally, with massive import and export flows. This connectivity means U.S. consumers are exposed to the single global oil price, and strong international demand is currently pulling fuel out of the country, raising domestic prices.
Oil is a global commodity, so prices are set internationally. Even if a nation is energy independent, a supply disruption anywhere will cause global buyers to bid up prices everywhere. Domestic producers will then either export or match the higher international price, raising costs at home.
Despite the US being energy independent, the price of oil is determined globally. A crisis in the Strait of Hormuz will raise prices for everyone, including Americans at the pump, as international buyers bid up the price of all available oil, including US-produced crude.
The global oil market has two parts: pipeline and seaborne. Price volatility and formation are dominated by the more flexible seaborne market, which can be redirected to meet global demand, making it the critical component for setting prices, despite only being 60% of total consumption.
The idea that US energy independence provides insulation from a global crisis is a fallacy. Markets are global. The only way to decouple US prices would be to enact export controls, which would ironically disrupt domestic markets, lead to production shut-ins, and ultimately fail to prevent economic damage from a global price shock.
Despite being a net oil exporter by volume, the U.S. is not isolated from global price shocks. Its market is deeply integrated through massive flows of both imports and exports. In the global seaborne market, there is effectively one oil price that all participants, including the U.S., must pay.
Unlike the 1973 crisis when the U.S. depended on foreign oil, it is now the world's largest producer. While consumers feel pain from high prices, U.S. energy companies profit enormously from the same crisis. This creates an internal economic buffer that makes the nation structurally stronger against energy disruptions.
Despite being the world's largest oil producer, the U.S. economy remains highly vulnerable to global price spikes. Oil is a global commodity, and the U.S. is a price taker. Domestic production doesn't shield consumers from prices set by international supply and demand dynamics.
A country's ability to produce its own oil doesn't protect its consumers from price hikes. When a major global supply is disrupted, other nations bid up the price on the international market, forcing domestic producers to match it and causing prices to rise everywhere.
Despite producing as much oil as it consumes, the US is not immune to price shocks. Consumers cut spending immediately, while producers delay new investment due to price uncertainty. This timing mismatch ensures oil shocks remain a net negative for the US economy over a 12-18 month horizon.
While Asian countries implement 4-day workweeks to conserve fuel amid soaring oil prices, the US remains insulated. America's status as a net energy exporter, thanks to its shale revolution, acts as a crucial economic firewall against global energy shocks and their severe societal impacts.