Everyone in Norway became a theoretical crown millionaire on Wednesday in a
milestone for the world’s biggest sovereign wealth fund that has ballooned
thanks to high oil and gas prices.
Set up in 1990, the fund owns around
1 percent of the world’s stocks, as well as bonds and real estate from London
to Boston, making the Nordic nation an exception when others are struggling
under a mountain of debts.
A preliminary counter on the website
of the central bank, which manages the fund, rose to 5.11 trillion crowns
($828.66 billion), fractionally more than a million times Norway’s most recent
official population estimate of 5,096,300.
It was the first time it reached the
equivalent of a million crowns each, central bank spokesman Thomas Sevang said.
Not that Norwegians will be able to
access or spend the money, squirreled away for a rainy day for them and future
generations. Norway has resisted the temptation to splurge all the windfall
since striking oil in the North Sea in 1969.
Finance Minister Siv Jensen told Reuters
the fund, called the Government Pension Fund Global, had helped iron out big,
unpredictable swings in oil and gas prices. Norway is the world’s number seven
oil exporter.
“Many countries have found that
temporary large revenues from natural resource exploitation produce relatively
short-lived booms that are followed by difficult adjustments,” she said in an
email.
The fund, equivalent to 183 percent
of 2013 gross domestic product, is expected to peak at 220 percent around 2030.
“The fund is a success in the sense
that parliament has managed to put aside money for the future. There are many
examples of countries that have mot managed that,” said Oeystein Doerum, chief
economist at DNB Markets.
Norway has sought to avoid the boom
and bust cycle by investing the cash abroad, rather than at home. Governments
can spend 4 percent of the fund in Norway each year, slightly more than the
annual return on investment.
Still, in Norway, oil wealth may
have made the state reluctant to make reforms or cut subsidies unthinkable
elsewhere. Farm subsidies allow farmers, for instance, to keep dairy cows in
heated barns in the Arctic.
It may also have made some
Norwegians reluctant to work. “One in five people of working age receives some
kind of social insurance instead of working,” Doerum said, despite an official
unemployment rate of 3.3 percent.
Reuters
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