American manufacturing exports became increasingly resource-intensive over the very period, roughly 1880-1920, during which the U.S. ascended to the position of world leadership in manufacturing. This paper challenges the simplistic view that the resource-intensity of manufacturing reflected the country's abundant geological endowment of mineral deposits. Instead, it shows that in the century following 1850 the U.S. exploited its natural resource potentials to a far greater extent than other countries and did so across virtually the entire range of industrial minerals. It argues that "natural resource abundance" was an endogenous, "socially constructed" condition that was not geologically pre-ordained. It examines the complex legal, institu...
Can technology neutralize the threat that depletion poses to resource availability? We offer new ins...
The natural resource curse hypothesis predicts that natural resource windfalls can reduce the long r...
Neo-classical economists argue that a resource-rich country will outperform a country with low resou...
American manufacturing exports became increasingly resource-intensive over the very period, roughly ...
The USA became the world's leading mineral-producing nation between 1870 and 1910, a development par...
Data on energy and mineral reserves suggest that natural resource abundance has not been a significa...
How is nature transformed into natural resources? Histories analyzing the state sciences of agricult...
Extractive resources are unevenly distributed geographically and our dependence on such resources is...
The contributions of innovations, factor endowments and institutions to American industrialization a...
The Historical Bases of American Economiec Leadership. G. Wright. The economic pre-eminence of the...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Extractive resources are unevenly distributed geographically and our dependence on such resources is...
During the post-war period, natural resource production has often been associated withperipheralizat...
This paper addresses three main questions; how can a country specialized in primary goods become an ...
Can technology neutralize the threat that depletion poses to resource availability? We offer new ins...
The natural resource curse hypothesis predicts that natural resource windfalls can reduce the long r...
Neo-classical economists argue that a resource-rich country will outperform a country with low resou...
American manufacturing exports became increasingly resource-intensive over the very period, roughly ...
The USA became the world's leading mineral-producing nation between 1870 and 1910, a development par...
Data on energy and mineral reserves suggest that natural resource abundance has not been a significa...
How is nature transformed into natural resources? Histories analyzing the state sciences of agricult...
Extractive resources are unevenly distributed geographically and our dependence on such resources is...
The contributions of innovations, factor endowments and institutions to American industrialization a...
The Historical Bases of American Economiec Leadership. G. Wright. The economic pre-eminence of the...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Extractive resources are unevenly distributed geographically and our dependence on such resources is...
During the post-war period, natural resource production has often been associated withperipheralizat...
This paper addresses three main questions; how can a country specialized in primary goods become an ...
Can technology neutralize the threat that depletion poses to resource availability? We offer new ins...
The natural resource curse hypothesis predicts that natural resource windfalls can reduce the long r...
Neo-classical economists argue that a resource-rich country will outperform a country with low resou...