Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages

How does an oil boom affect the forest cover of tropical oil exporting-countries? Are they more or less likely than non-oil countries to experience forest loss? What macro-economic linkages and policies are decisive? This article summarises research on land-use changes in eight tropical developing countries. Our country-comparative approach reveals that the direct oil impacts on forests are unquestionably subordinate compared to oil's derived macroeconomic impact. In most cases, oil wealth indirectly but significantly comes to protect tropical forests. The core mechanism here is that oil rents cause 'Dutch Disease', decreasing the price-competitiveness of agriculture and logging, which strongly diminishes pressures for deforestation and forest degradation. But domestic policy responses to oil wealth are also vital determinants for the forest outcome. When governments use most oil wealth for urban spending sprees, this reinforces the core effect by pulling more labor out of land-using and forest-degrading activities. Yet, in extreme cases when boosting oil revenues finance large road-construction programs or frontier-colonization projects, the core forest-protective effect of oil wealth can be reversed. Repeated currency devaluation and import protection of heavily land-using domestic sectors also contribute to increased forest pressures. These conclusions have ample policy implications, reaching beyond the group of tropical oil countries. Other international capital transfers, like bilateral credits, aid or debt relief can have similar impacts. These measures will alleviate pressures on forests, unless they come to bolster specific forest-detrimental policies. This also provides some suggestions on what forest-friendly safeguards could realistically be taken in the design of structural adjustment programs, considering the important trade-offs between development and conservation objectives.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wunder, Sven, Sunderlin, William D.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2004
Subjects:land use, forest cover, deforestation, developing countries, development aid, oils, macroeconomics, economic policy,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18628
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1154
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-186282016-05-30T17:48:44Z Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages Wunder, Sven Sunderlin, William D. land use forest cover deforestation developing countries development aid oils macroeconomics economic policy How does an oil boom affect the forest cover of tropical oil exporting-countries? Are they more or less likely than non-oil countries to experience forest loss? What macro-economic linkages and policies are decisive? This article summarises research on land-use changes in eight tropical developing countries. Our country-comparative approach reveals that the direct oil impacts on forests are unquestionably subordinate compared to oil's derived macroeconomic impact. In most cases, oil wealth indirectly but significantly comes to protect tropical forests. The core mechanism here is that oil rents cause 'Dutch Disease', decreasing the price-competitiveness of agriculture and logging, which strongly diminishes pressures for deforestation and forest degradation. But domestic policy responses to oil wealth are also vital determinants for the forest outcome. When governments use most oil wealth for urban spending sprees, this reinforces the core effect by pulling more labor out of land-using and forest-degrading activities. Yet, in extreme cases when boosting oil revenues finance large road-construction programs or frontier-colonization projects, the core forest-protective effect of oil wealth can be reversed. Repeated currency devaluation and import protection of heavily land-using domestic sectors also contribute to increased forest pressures. These conclusions have ample policy implications, reaching beyond the group of tropical oil countries. Other international capital transfers, like bilateral credits, aid or debt relief can have similar impacts. These measures will alleviate pressures on forests, unless they come to bolster specific forest-detrimental policies. This also provides some suggestions on what forest-friendly safeguards could realistically be taken in the design of structural adjustment programs, considering the important trade-offs between development and conservation objectives. 2004 2012-06-04T09:08:38Z 2012-06-04T09:08:38Z Journal Article Wunder, S., Sunderlin, W.D. 2004. Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages . World Bank Research Observer 19 (2) :231-257. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18628 https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1154 en World Bank Research Observer
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic land use
forest cover
deforestation
developing countries
development aid
oils
macroeconomics
economic policy
land use
forest cover
deforestation
developing countries
development aid
oils
macroeconomics
economic policy
spellingShingle land use
forest cover
deforestation
developing countries
development aid
oils
macroeconomics
economic policy
land use
forest cover
deforestation
developing countries
development aid
oils
macroeconomics
economic policy
Wunder, Sven
Sunderlin, William D.
Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
description How does an oil boom affect the forest cover of tropical oil exporting-countries? Are they more or less likely than non-oil countries to experience forest loss? What macro-economic linkages and policies are decisive? This article summarises research on land-use changes in eight tropical developing countries. Our country-comparative approach reveals that the direct oil impacts on forests are unquestionably subordinate compared to oil's derived macroeconomic impact. In most cases, oil wealth indirectly but significantly comes to protect tropical forests. The core mechanism here is that oil rents cause 'Dutch Disease', decreasing the price-competitiveness of agriculture and logging, which strongly diminishes pressures for deforestation and forest degradation. But domestic policy responses to oil wealth are also vital determinants for the forest outcome. When governments use most oil wealth for urban spending sprees, this reinforces the core effect by pulling more labor out of land-using and forest-degrading activities. Yet, in extreme cases when boosting oil revenues finance large road-construction programs or frontier-colonization projects, the core forest-protective effect of oil wealth can be reversed. Repeated currency devaluation and import protection of heavily land-using domestic sectors also contribute to increased forest pressures. These conclusions have ample policy implications, reaching beyond the group of tropical oil countries. Other international capital transfers, like bilateral credits, aid or debt relief can have similar impacts. These measures will alleviate pressures on forests, unless they come to bolster specific forest-detrimental policies. This also provides some suggestions on what forest-friendly safeguards could realistically be taken in the design of structural adjustment programs, considering the important trade-offs between development and conservation objectives.
format Journal Article
topic_facet land use
forest cover
deforestation
developing countries
development aid
oils
macroeconomics
economic policy
author Wunder, Sven
Sunderlin, William D.
author_facet Wunder, Sven
Sunderlin, William D.
author_sort Wunder, Sven
title Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
title_short Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
title_full Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
title_fullStr Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
title_full_unstemmed Oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
title_sort oil, macroeconomics, and forests: assessing the linkages
publishDate 2004
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/18628
https://www.cifor.org/knowledge/publication/1154
work_keys_str_mv AT wundersven oilmacroeconomicsandforestsassessingthelinkages
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