We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sedimentary basins—areas where petroleum can potentially form. Instrumental variables estimates indicate that oil production impedes democracy and fiscal capacity development, increases corruption, and raises GDP per capita without significantly harming the non-resource sectors of the economy. We find no evidence that oil production increases internal armed conflict, coup attempts, or political purges. In several specifications failure to account for endogeneity leads to substantial underestimation of the adverse effects of oil, suggesting that countries with higher-quality political institutions and greater fiscal capacity disproportionately se...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
Government behavior can be impacted by the benefits arising from natural resources. Benevolent gover...
Some scholars suggest that the Middle East's oil wealth helps explain its failure to democratize. Th...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
The resource curse is a topic studied intensively in both economics and political science. Much of t...
The resource curse is a topic studied intensively in both economics and political science. Much of t...
This paper evaluates the existence of a resource curse on political regimes using the Synthetic Cont...
This study re-examines the validity of oil-hinders-democracy hypothesis by comparing the long-term e...
As petroleum extraction and consumption has steadily increased in recent decades, economists and dev...
A burgeoning literature argues that the abundance of oil in developing countries strengthens autoc...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
We analyze how a country's political institutions affect oil production within its borders. We find ...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
Government behavior can be impacted by the benefits arising from natural resources. Benevolent gover...
Some scholars suggest that the Middle East's oil wealth helps explain its failure to democratize. Th...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
The resource curse is a topic studied intensively in both economics and political science. Much of t...
The resource curse is a topic studied intensively in both economics and political science. Much of t...
This paper evaluates the existence of a resource curse on political regimes using the Synthetic Cont...
This study re-examines the validity of oil-hinders-democracy hypothesis by comparing the long-term e...
As petroleum extraction and consumption has steadily increased in recent decades, economists and dev...
A burgeoning literature argues that the abundance of oil in developing countries strengthens autoc...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
Many studies have found a negative relationship between oil abundance and democracy. However, recent...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
We analyze how a country's political institutions affect oil production within its borders. We find ...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
Government behavior can be impacted by the benefits arising from natural resources. Benevolent gover...
Some scholars suggest that the Middle East's oil wealth helps explain its failure to democratize. Th...