... in naturalresource tend to grow slower than countries poor in natural ...the naturalresource abundant economies will lose competitiveness due to the low growth of manufacturing sector ...
... variables are positively correlated with GDP (e.g., institutional quality regressions) may produce estimates biased in favor of the naturalresourcecurse. As Alexeev and Conrad (2009) explained, ...
... a naturalresourcecurse in fiscally decentralized ...a resource endowment gives the region in which it is located an advantage in the inter-regional tax competition over capital so that some ...
... Thus, this letter employs total factor productivity (TFP) as a measure of bank performance. We believe that TFP offers a more comprehensive and robust measure of firm-level performance. Further, we use a rich monthly ...
... that resource abundant countries grow more slowly and lag, on average, behind countries with less ...the naturalresource ...in natural resources could be dead-end activities because of, for ...
... that resource dependence only negatively affects growth performance in countries where institutional quality is worse than a critical ...the naturalresourcecurse is less severe in countries ...
... Coal mining has long been associated with higher poverty in Appalachia, consistent with a natural resources curse. This study reassessed coal mining’s link to poverty in Appalachia, including the more ...
... stable resource whose value has fluctuated very little in the past 30 ...‘naturalresourcecurse’ is highly dependent upon which resource the economy is dependent upon, at least ...
... the naturalresourcecurse hypothesis refers speci…cally to developing economies (Auty ...the resource share measure with fractionalization and rule of law in the cross-sectional case, and the ...
... on naturalresourcecurse use standard linear models with interacting terms (between a proxy of naturalresource abundance and a variable of institutional quality) and might not ...
... some resource-rich countries do surprisingly poorly economically, while others do ...The NaturalResourceCurse should not be interpreted as a rule that resource-rich countries are ...
... Additionally, the relation among ‘natural resources’ and FDI for developing countries is relevant from a policy point of view. FDI has a positive role on economic performance, which has been extensively discussed ...
... the resourcecurse does not work through governance, we have found strong evidence that it works conditional on ...the resourcecurse. Mehlum et al. (2006) argue that resource rents ...
... We consider a panel of twenty-eight countries between 1969 and 2004, with several missing observations, for a total of 605 observations. The dependent variable is the ratio of wages in mining and quarrying sector (data ...
... disappointing, but it is not uncommon in the literature (for an overview of early studies, see Przeworski and Limongi 1993; for more recent work, see for example Barro 1996, Minier 1998, Durham 1999). The literature ...
... of resource exports as an additional explanatory variable in the variance ...of natural resources is not limited to oil-producing countries, but also includes for example copper, coffee, banana and tobacco ...
... THE NATURAL RESOURCES CURSE A large literature exists in the existing theoretical explanations of a resourcecurse, in other words the mechanism by which natural-resource ...
... in naturalresource abundant countries is usually explained by a crowding-out effect of the primary goods industries: If unskilled workers can earn a reasonable wage in the pri- mary goods sector, they have ...
... Natural resources and institutions: the “natural resources curse” revisited Pessoa, Argentino Faculdade de Economia da Universidade do Porto.. Online at https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/8[r] ...