Knowledge has adopted a preferential role in the explanation of development while the evidence about the effect of natural resources in countries’ performance is more controversial in the economic literature. This paper tries to demonstrate that natural resources may positively affect growth in countries with a strong natural resources specialization pattern although the magnitude of these effects depend on the type of resources and on other aspects related to the production and innovation systems. The positive trajectory described by a set of national economies mainly specialized in natural resources and low-tech industries invites us to analyze what is the combination of factors that serves as engine for a sustainable development process....
This article explains the relation between natural resources and economic growth using a bibliograph...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
The effect of natural resources (NR) on growth has been a topic widely discussed in the economics li...
Several explanations have been put forward for the phenomenon- referred to as ‘curse of natural reso...
In the innovation and development literature, natural resources (NR) are generally viewed as a curse...
Natural resources are not homogeneous in nature, having certain features in the productive process t...
This report reflects research efforts within the global network of scholars, Globelics. Within this ...
Despite growing academic attention to the relationship between economic development and natural reso...
The importance of natural resources as a factor of economic development in modern business environme...
We study a two-sector endogenous growth model where a single consumption good is obtained using a re...
Data on energy and mineral reserves suggest that natural resource abundance has not been a significa...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Natural resources are not homogeneous in nature, having certain features in the productive process t...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
This article explains the relation between natural resources and economic growth using a bibliograph...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...
The effect of natural resources (NR) on growth has been a topic widely discussed in the economics li...
Several explanations have been put forward for the phenomenon- referred to as ‘curse of natural reso...
In the innovation and development literature, natural resources (NR) are generally viewed as a curse...
Natural resources are not homogeneous in nature, having certain features in the productive process t...
This report reflects research efforts within the global network of scholars, Globelics. Within this ...
Despite growing academic attention to the relationship between economic development and natural reso...
The importance of natural resources as a factor of economic development in modern business environme...
We study a two-sector endogenous growth model where a single consumption good is obtained using a re...
Data on energy and mineral reserves suggest that natural resource abundance has not been a significa...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Natural resources are not homogeneous in nature, having certain features in the productive process t...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
This article explains the relation between natural resources and economic growth using a bibliograph...
This paper refers to the consequences of the presence of natural resources for countries endowed wit...
This Working Paper joint two previous article by the authors: The economic theory of exhaustible na...