The purpose of this paper is to test whether institutional governance and its performance is a main driving force to achieve a positive relationship between natural resources and economic growth in the long run. The main objective is to ascertain what kind of institutional governance would be needed to distribute natural resource wealth in such a way so as to achieve economic stability, and what specific policies are needed to avoid the curse in resource-rich developing countries. The research makes an attempt to interpret the role of institutional governance, as reflected by the indicators, in the context of resource-rich, post-Soviet countries. The main finding is that an abundance of natural resources does not guarantee economic growth, ...
Only abstract. Paper copies of master’s theses are listed in the Helka database (http://www.helsinki...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
Using panel data from 1980 to 2010 on 34 sub-Saharan African countries, this paper examines whether ...
The present paper deals with the role of political authorities and institutions in explaining growth...
Natural resource dependence is believed to have potential impact on institutional development, and t...
This paper shows that whether natural resources are good or bad for a country’s development cruciall...
This paper attempts to provide a probable answer to a longstanding resource curse puzzle; i.e., why ...
This paper investigates whether natural resource revenues in the GCC countries lead to economic grow...
There is a big debate among economists, why are the resource-rich economies growing slower than reso...
This study explores the natural resource curse and its possible cure via good institutional quality....
The curse of natural resources is broadly addressed in the literature on economic development and gr...
Empirical evidence seems to indicate that economic growth since 1965 has varied inversely with natur...
Abstract: The natural resource curse represents an enormous impediment to development. Yet it is im...
This note presents a simple model of how resource rents can affect economic growth of a region of a ...
The “resource curse” is a familiar and recurring theme in development economics. But does resource a...
Only abstract. Paper copies of master’s theses are listed in the Helka database (http://www.helsinki...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
Using panel data from 1980 to 2010 on 34 sub-Saharan African countries, this paper examines whether ...
The present paper deals with the role of political authorities and institutions in explaining growth...
Natural resource dependence is believed to have potential impact on institutional development, and t...
This paper shows that whether natural resources are good or bad for a country’s development cruciall...
This paper attempts to provide a probable answer to a longstanding resource curse puzzle; i.e., why ...
This paper investigates whether natural resource revenues in the GCC countries lead to economic grow...
There is a big debate among economists, why are the resource-rich economies growing slower than reso...
This study explores the natural resource curse and its possible cure via good institutional quality....
The curse of natural resources is broadly addressed in the literature on economic development and gr...
Empirical evidence seems to indicate that economic growth since 1965 has varied inversely with natur...
Abstract: The natural resource curse represents an enormous impediment to development. Yet it is im...
This note presents a simple model of how resource rents can affect economic growth of a region of a ...
The “resource curse” is a familiar and recurring theme in development economics. But does resource a...
Only abstract. Paper copies of master’s theses are listed in the Helka database (http://www.helsinki...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
Using panel data from 1980 to 2010 on 34 sub-Saharan African countries, this paper examines whether ...