Norwegian Ministry of Finance Managing oil revenues Norway s experience Senior advisor Tore Eriksen September 13, 2018 in Maputo
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 2
Petroleum accounts for a substantial part of the Norwegian economy Share of GDP Share of state revenues 12 % 13 % Share of total investment Share of total exports 21% 36 % 3 Source: Ministry of Petroleum and Energy (Figures as of year end 2016) 3
Human capital far exceeds the importance of total petroleum wealth Financial assets 9% 2% Petroleum wealth Real capital 14 % 75 % Present value of future labour input Net national wealth per capita. Per cent Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Sources: Ministry of Finance 4
Norwegian Ministry of Finance The impacts of petroleum activities on the non-oil economy Non-oil economy Demands For goods and services Use of oil revenues, but how much? Petroleum activities Government net cash flow Government Save, but how and where? Fund 5
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 6
Possible to tax the resource rent without distorting incentives to invest Starting point of resource rent taxation Extraordinary profits due to limited resources Immobile resources A good tax base Photo: Kjetil Alsvik/Conoco Phillips 7
High government take in Norway Petroleum tax system Production from 1971 Resource rent tax introduced 1975 Ordinary tax rate 23% + Special tax rate 55% = marginal tax rate 78% State Direct Financial Interest (SDFI) from 1985 = 100% cash flow tax Photo: Colourbox 8
1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2003 2007 2011 2015 Bill. 2018- NOK Oil price 2018-NOK per barrel Government take from petroleum 500 1000 400 800 300 600 200 400 100 200 0 0-100 -200 9 Taxes Gross fees SDFI Statoil dividende Oil price (r.h. scale)
Balance sheet for a country 1 Human Capital Physical Capital Machinery Factories Houses Infrastructure Financial assets Public Private Debt Public Private Liabilities Pensions. + Natural Resources Petroleum 10
Balance sheet for a country 2 Reallocation on the Asset side: The challenge is to reallocate the petroleum wealth into other assets in ways that increases future production capabilities Education (Human Capital) Infrastructure (Real Capital) Financial assets (Financial Capital) This challenge is common for all countries, but all countries should pursue a long-term strategy How to reallocate best may differ between countries 11
Petroleum revenues are temporary and volatile Petroleum revenues not income in traditional sense Income stemming from depletion of nonrenewable natural resources Transform windfall gain to permanent increase in consumption Need for separating current accrual from spending Necessitates saving a large part of petroleum revenues Extraction Path Consumption path after discovery Consumption path before petroleum discovery t 0 Time 12
GPFG is fully integrated with fiscal policy Return on investments Petroleum revenues Non-oil revenues Petroleum revenues Fund State Budget Transfer to finance non-oil deficit Expenditures Fiscal policy guideline Over time spend Fund real return (estimated at 3 percent) Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism 13
Fiscal rule (introduced in 2001) Petroleum revenues should be phased into the economy in line with the development in expected real return of the Fund (estimated at 3 per cent) Considerable emphasis put on stabilizing the economy Emphasis on a smooth and sustainable phasing in of petroleum revenues Automatic stabilizers are allowed to operate, focus on non-oil structural deficit Discretionary fiscal policy is not ruled out but fiscal policy should have a medium-term orientation Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism 14
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022 2023 2024 2025 2026 2027 2028 2029 2030 12 10 8 Spending of oil revenues. Per cent of non-oil GDP Structural non-oil deficit 4 pct. real return 3 pct. real return 12 10 8 6 6 4 4 2 2 0 0 Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Source: Ministry of Finance (RNB 2018) 15
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 16
Organizational chart, Minister of Finance State Secretaries Secretary General Political adviser Director General Communication Unit Administrative Affairs Economic Policy Asset Management Financial Markets Tax Policy Tax Law Budget Governance Governance 17
Governance structure marked by clear lines of responsibilities The Storting Norwegian Parliament Government Pension Fund Act National Budget Annual Report to the Storting Material changes presented to Parliament prior to implementation Ministry of Finance Management mandate Regulation on risk management and reporting Guidelines for observation and exclusion Quarterly and annual reports Investment strategy advice Norges Bank Operational manager of GPFG 18
Hierarchy of regulation, supervision and reporting The Storting Regulation and delegation of authority Ministry of Finance Supervision: Auditor General Reporting of performance and risk The Executive Board of Norges Bank Supervision: Supervisory Council and External Audit Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM) Supervision: Executive Board and Norges Bank Internal Audit Internal and external managers Supervision: NBIM Compliance and Control Governance Governance 19
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 20
Overall investment strategy Highest possible long-term financial return within a moderate level of risk The investment strategy is in particular characterized by: Broad diversification Harvesting of risk premia A moderate degree of active management Responsible management Cost efficiency A clear governance structure Investment strategy 21
The investment strategy of the Fund has evolved over time. Important decisions are anchored in Parliament 40 % equities Non- government bonds Inflation-linked government bonds 60 % equities Small-cap First investment in unlisted real estate Adjusted framework for responsible management 70 % equities 1998 2000 2002 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2011 2012 2014 2016 2017 Some emerging equity markets Ethical guidelines High-yield bonds Commodity derivaties New risk management requirements Unlisted real estate, All emerging equity markets New benchmark index for equity and fixed income investments New regulation on investments in unlisted real estate Investments 22
Broad geographical distribution of Fund investments Actual investments at yearend 2017 Investments Source: Norges Bank 23
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 24
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Considerable return volatility Measured in the Fund s currency basket 40 Annual return in per cent 40 Nominal return in th first half of 2018 30 13.7 % 30 20 20 GPFG 10 10 0.27% 0 0-10 -10 Equities 0.42% Fixed income -0.39% Real estate 4.40% - 20-20 - 30-30 Fund performance Sources: Norges Bank and Ministry of Finance 25
Fund performance Key figures at June 30th, 2018 (annualised data in currency basket) Last 12 months Last 3 Years Last 5 years Last 10 years Since 1.1.1998 Gross annual return (percent) 7.04 6.26 8.16 7.00 5.95 of which relative return on equity- and fixed income investments (percentage points) 0.24 0.21 0.15 0.21 0.27 Annual price inflation (percent) 2.30 1.55 1.40 1.55 1.80 Annual management costs (percent) 0.06 0.06 0.06 0.08 0.08 Annual net real return on fund (percent) 4.57 4.57 6.60 5.29 3.99 Fund performance Fund performance Sources: Norges Bank and Ministry of Finance 26
GPFG is among the largest funds in the world 9,000 Market value development 1996 June 30th 2018. NOK billion (lha) and per cent of GDP Mainland Norway (rha) 8 337 300% 8,000 250% 7,000 6,000 200% 5,000 Fund size as share of GDP for Mainland Norway (rha) 150% 4,000 3,000 100% 2,000 50% 1,000-1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 Q2 2018 0% Fund performance Fund performance Sources: Norges Bank, Statistics Norway and Ministry of Finance 27
Fund value broken down on sources of inception NOK billion (1996 December 31th 2017) 8484 5068 4151 Fixed Income 1,037 Real estate 53 1040-1,736-39 Equities 3,062 Return attributed to individual asset classes Sources of inception Sources: Norges Bank and Ministry of Finance 28
Outline Petroleum revenues and fund mechanism Governance Investments Fund performance Responsible management 29
High degree of transparency in Fund management Prerequisite to ensure broad support for and confidence in the management of Fund Management mandate states; greatest possible degree of transparency within the limits defined by a sound execution of the management assignment Reporting Holding lists Voting records Contributes to a robust investment strategy Anchoring of risk profile with stakeholders Governance Governance 30
Tools employed in responsible management of the GPFG Measures in day-to-day business: Active ownership Environment-related investments International collaboration and contribution to the development of best practice Research and investigation Measures of last resort: Observation Exclusion of companies Responsible management 31
Key lessons from Norway s experience 1 Income from petroleum is volatile and uncertain There is a need to separate current spending from current revenues All countries need a fiscal rule, but the rule should be tailormade Clear definition of roles and responsibilities, and transparency, are important aspects of any governance structure 32
Key lessons from Norway s experience 2 The petroleum sector accounts for a substantial part of our economy. Integrating the oil sector in national account statistics has been a prerequisite for understanding and analysing the sector and for economic policy making. Perspectives for the oil sector and for oil revenues are an integrated part of economic planning in Norway, in annual fiscal budgets and in economic perspectives presented by the Ministry of Finance to Parliament every fourth year. 33
Norwegian Ministry of Finance P.O.Box 8008 Dep NO-0030 Oslo, Norway Telephone: +47 22 24 41 63 E-mail: postmottak@fin.dep.no www.regjeringen.no/en/dep/fin www.government.no/gpf www.nbim.no/en www.etikkradet.no/en