Abstract Why do African and Middle Eastern countries seem cursed by an abundance of natural resources yet USA, Australia and Norway seem blessed? A growing literature has argued that the benevolence or malignance of natural resources depends upon the quality of institutions. This paper offers a new explanation based on associational freedom and its interaction with the political system. The model predicts that natural resources have an adverse impact on economic performance and transition to democracy in authoritarian regimes but not in democracies. It also predicts that repression of associational freedom will be increasing in natural resources in authoritarian regimes. We test the model's predictions using fixed-effects regressions o...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
ACL-2International audienceThe literature on the impact of an abundance of natural resources on econ...
Subsoil natural resource endowments and associated rents—if well harnessed and managed—can serve as ...
Abstract: A large body of scholarship finds that there is a relationship between economic dependenc...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
A puzzling piece of empirical evidence suggests that resource-abundant countries tend to grow slower...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural res...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural re...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
Both the theory and empirical work linking natural resource wealth to authoritarianism and underdeve...
How does natural resource abundance influence state and society? Since the late 1980s, a number of s...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural res...
Abstract: The natural resource curse represents an enormous impediment to development. Yet it is im...
This paper looks at the relationship between natural resource endowment, particularly the type assoc...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
ACL-2International audienceThe literature on the impact of an abundance of natural resources on econ...
Subsoil natural resource endowments and associated rents—if well harnessed and managed—can serve as ...
Abstract: A large body of scholarship finds that there is a relationship between economic dependenc...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
A puzzling piece of empirical evidence suggests that resource-abundant countries tend to grow slower...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural res...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural re...
We study how natural resources can feed corruption and how this effect depends on the quality of the...
Both the theory and empirical work linking natural resource wealth to authoritarianism and underdeve...
How does natural resource abundance influence state and society? Since the late 1980s, a number of s...
We propose a theoretical model to explain empirical regularities related to the curse of natural res...
Abstract: The natural resource curse represents an enormous impediment to development. Yet it is im...
This paper looks at the relationship between natural resource endowment, particularly the type assoc...
The political resource curse – the detrimental effect of natural resource dependence on democracy – ...
ACL-2International audienceThe literature on the impact of an abundance of natural resources on econ...
Subsoil natural resource endowments and associated rents—if well harnessed and managed—can serve as ...