OPEC in AP Comparative Government

OPEC (Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries) is an international organization of oil-producing states that coordinates production levels and pricing, meaning member countries like Nigeria accept limits on their own oil output in exchange for collective influence over global prices.

Verified for the 2027 AP Comparative Government examLast updated June 2026

What is OPEC?

OPEC is a cartel of oil-exporting countries that agree on how much oil each member will produce. Why agree to limits? Because if every member pumped as much as possible, prices would crash. By coordinating, members keep prices (and their revenues) higher than they'd be alone.

For AP Comp Gov, OPEC matters because Nigeria, one of the six course countries, is a member. When Nigeria follows an OPEC production quota, its government is letting an international body shape a core domestic economic decision. That's the trade-off Topic 5.5 is built around. Countries give up some control over policy to gain the benefits of membership. OPEC is an international organization, not a supranational one, so it can't legally force Nigeria to comply. The pressure is economic and political, not binding law.

Why OPEC matters in AP® Comparative Government

OPEC lives in Topic 5.5 (International and Supranational Organizations) within Unit 5: Political and Economic Changes and Development. It directly supports learning objective AP Comp Gov 5.5.A, which asks you to explain how international and supranational organizations influence domestic policymakers and national sovereignty. OPEC is one of the cleanest examples of that influence. Nigeria's oil policy isn't made in Abuja alone; it's negotiated with other producing states. OPEC also connects to the bigger Unit 5 story about resource-dependent economies. Nigeria's heavy reliance on oil rents (the focus of the 2023 quantitative FRQ) is exactly why OPEC's decisions hit Nigerian budgets, subsidies, and even political stability so hard.

How OPEC connects across the course

National sovereignty (Unit 5)

Every time Nigeria accepts an OPEC production quota, it trades a slice of policy independence for higher and more stable oil prices. That's the sovereignty bargain at the heart of LO 5.5.A, and OPEC is the go-to example for it.

International Monetary Fund (IMF) (Unit 5)

OPEC and the IMF pressure states in opposite directions. OPEC asks members to coordinate and restrict output, while the IMF's structural adjustment programs push privatization and open markets. Nigeria has felt both at once, including IMF pressure to privatize its state oil company.

European Union (EU) (Unit 5)

The EU is supranational, so its rules legally bind members. OPEC is just international, so compliance is voluntary and enforced by peer pressure and self-interest. Keeping that distinction straight is a classic Topic 5.5 move.

BRICS (Unit 5)

Like OPEC, BRICS is a group of states (including Russia, another course country with a resource-heavy economy) cooperating to gain leverage they wouldn't have alone. Both show how developing and middle-income states use collective organizations to push back on a Western-dominated global economy.

Is OPEC on the AP® Comparative Government exam?

OPEC shows up in multiple-choice questions tied to LO 5.5.A, almost always through Nigeria. A typical stem asks what Nigeria's compliance with OPEC production quotas demonstrates, and the answer is the influence of international organizations on domestic policymaking and sovereignty. You should be able to explain the mechanism, not just name the organization. Say how OPEC constrains Nigeria (production quotas limit a sovereign economic choice) and why Nigeria stays anyway (collective price power). OPEC also feeds the quantitative FRQ. The 2023 exam's Q2 used natural resource rents as a percentage of GDP as its stimulus, and being able to link high oil rents to Nigeria's vulnerability to OPEC decisions and global price swings is exactly the kind of data-to-concept reasoning that question rewards.

OPEC vs European Union (EU)

Both appear in Topic 5.5, but they sit on opposite sides of the international/supranational line. The EU is supranational, meaning its laws and court rulings legally bind member states. OPEC is international, meaning members coordinate voluntarily and no OPEC rule overrides Nigerian law. If an MCQ asks which organization can compel compliance through binding law, that's the EU, not OPEC. OPEC's power comes from members' shared economic interest in keeping oil prices up.

Key things to remember about OPEC

  • OPEC is an international organization of oil-exporting countries that sets production quotas to influence global oil prices.

  • Nigeria's membership in OPEC is the course's main example, since following OPEC quotas means an outside body shapes Nigeria's domestic economic policy.

  • OPEC supports learning objective AP Comp Gov 5.5.A on how international and supranational organizations influence policymakers and national sovereignty.

  • OPEC is international, not supranational, so unlike the EU it cannot legally bind its members; compliance is voluntary and driven by shared economic interest.

  • Nigeria's heavy dependence on oil rents, the subject of the 2023 quantitative FRQ stimulus, is exactly why OPEC decisions matter so much for its budget and stability.

Frequently asked questions about OPEC

What is OPEC in AP Comp Gov?

OPEC is the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries, an international organization where oil-producing states coordinate production quotas and pricing. In AP Comp Gov it appears in Topic 5.5 as an example of how international organizations pressure member states' sovereignty, especially Nigeria's.

Can OPEC force Nigeria to follow its production quotas?

No. OPEC is an international organization, not a supranational one, so it has no legal power to compel members. Nigeria complies because the collective benefit of higher, more stable oil prices outweighs the cost of limiting its own production.

How is OPEC different from the IMF?

OPEC coordinates oil production among exporting countries, while the IMF lends money to struggling economies and attaches conditions like privatization and reduced subsidies. Nigeria interacts with both, and they pull in different directions: OPEC asks it to restrict output, while the IMF has pushed it to privatize its state oil company.

Why is Nigeria's OPEC membership tested on the AP exam?

Nigeria is one of the six course countries and an oil-dependent economy, so OPEC is the concrete example for learning objective 5.5.A. Exam questions ask what Nigeria's compliance with quotas demonstrates, and the answer is the influence of international organizations on domestic policy and sovereignty.

Is OPEC a supranational organization?

No. Supranational organizations like the EU make binding rules that override member states' laws. OPEC only coordinates voluntary agreements, so it counts as an international organization, and the AP exam expects you to keep that distinction straight.