What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?

A large body of literature has arisen in economics and political science analyzing the apparent “resource curse”—the tendency of countries with high levels of natural resources to exhibit worse economic and political outcomes. The author examines the purported causal mechanisms underlying this “curse” and shows that they all center on the revenue that these resources generate for the government. As such, it is not surprising that the most recent literature on the topic has demonstrated that, in the hands of a competent government, natural resources have no negative consequences and may actually have positive effects. The important question therefore is: What can be done in countries without effective governments? Policy proposals have centered on (a) taking the resources out of the hands of the government or (b) having the government commit to use the funds in certain ways. Neither of these has been particularly successful, which we might have predicted from research on another important nontax revenue source for developing countries: foreign aid. The close parallels between the foreign aid and “resource curse” literatures are reviewed, as are the lessons from the aid literature. These lessons suggest the need for an important change in approach toward poorly governed resource-rich countries.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Morrison, Kevin M.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:en_US
Published: Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank 2012-02-01
Subjects:conditionality, crowding out, economic development, economic growth, economic policies, economics, empirical analysis, environmental, environments, expenditures, marginal benefits, natural resources, oil, oil prices, policy environment, producers, property rights, resource management, technological progress, transaction costs,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15347
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spelling dig-okr-10986153472021-04-23T14:03:22Z What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid? Morrison, Kevin M. conditionality crowding out economic development economic growth economic policies economics empirical analysis environmental environments expenditures marginal benefits natural resources oil oil prices policy environment producers property rights resource management technological progress transaction costs A large body of literature has arisen in economics and political science analyzing the apparent “resource curse”—the tendency of countries with high levels of natural resources to exhibit worse economic and political outcomes. The author examines the purported causal mechanisms underlying this “curse” and shows that they all center on the revenue that these resources generate for the government. As such, it is not surprising that the most recent literature on the topic has demonstrated that, in the hands of a competent government, natural resources have no negative consequences and may actually have positive effects. The important question therefore is: What can be done in countries without effective governments? Policy proposals have centered on (a) taking the resources out of the hands of the government or (b) having the government commit to use the funds in certain ways. Neither of these has been particularly successful, which we might have predicted from research on another important nontax revenue source for developing countries: foreign aid. The close parallels between the foreign aid and “resource curse” literatures are reviewed, as are the lessons from the aid literature. These lessons suggest the need for an important change in approach toward poorly governed resource-rich countries. 2013-08-26T17:13:12Z 2013-08-26T17:13:12Z 2012-02-01 Journal Article World Bank Research Observer 1564-6971 doi:10.1093/wbro/lkq013 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15347 en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank Journal Article Africa
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language en_US
topic conditionality
crowding out
economic development
economic growth
economic policies
economics
empirical analysis
environmental
environments
expenditures
marginal benefits
natural resources
oil
oil prices
policy environment
producers
property rights
resource management
technological progress
transaction costs
conditionality
crowding out
economic development
economic growth
economic policies
economics
empirical analysis
environmental
environments
expenditures
marginal benefits
natural resources
oil
oil prices
policy environment
producers
property rights
resource management
technological progress
transaction costs
spellingShingle conditionality
crowding out
economic development
economic growth
economic policies
economics
empirical analysis
environmental
environments
expenditures
marginal benefits
natural resources
oil
oil prices
policy environment
producers
property rights
resource management
technological progress
transaction costs
conditionality
crowding out
economic development
economic growth
economic policies
economics
empirical analysis
environmental
environments
expenditures
marginal benefits
natural resources
oil
oil prices
policy environment
producers
property rights
resource management
technological progress
transaction costs
Morrison, Kevin M.
What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
description A large body of literature has arisen in economics and political science analyzing the apparent “resource curse”—the tendency of countries with high levels of natural resources to exhibit worse economic and political outcomes. The author examines the purported causal mechanisms underlying this “curse” and shows that they all center on the revenue that these resources generate for the government. As such, it is not surprising that the most recent literature on the topic has demonstrated that, in the hands of a competent government, natural resources have no negative consequences and may actually have positive effects. The important question therefore is: What can be done in countries without effective governments? Policy proposals have centered on (a) taking the resources out of the hands of the government or (b) having the government commit to use the funds in certain ways. Neither of these has been particularly successful, which we might have predicted from research on another important nontax revenue source for developing countries: foreign aid. The close parallels between the foreign aid and “resource curse” literatures are reviewed, as are the lessons from the aid literature. These lessons suggest the need for an important change in approach toward poorly governed resource-rich countries.
format Journal Article
topic_facet conditionality
crowding out
economic development
economic growth
economic policies
economics
empirical analysis
environmental
environments
expenditures
marginal benefits
natural resources
oil
oil prices
policy environment
producers
property rights
resource management
technological progress
transaction costs
author Morrison, Kevin M.
author_facet Morrison, Kevin M.
author_sort Morrison, Kevin M.
title What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
title_short What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
title_full What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
title_fullStr What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
title_full_unstemmed What Can We Learn about the “Resource Curse” from Foreign Aid?
title_sort what can we learn about the “resource curse” from foreign aid?
publisher Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank
publishDate 2012-02-01
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15347
work_keys_str_mv AT morrisonkevinm whatcanwelearnabouttheresourcecursefromforeignaid
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