Corruption is considered an important driver of the resource curse in developing countries. Based on a large-scale field experiment in Tanzania, this paper studies how the salience of future natural resource revenues shapes beliefs, attitudes, and behavior. We find some evidence that information about the discovery of natural gas causes people to expect more corruption in the future, but no evidence of the information making people at present more willing to engage in corruption and dishonest behavior or less trusting. The findings do not support the idea of self-fulfilling expectations about future corruption. The paper provides a rich set of results on the determinants of corruption and trust in a development context, which may contribute...
In many developing countries, natural resources such as oil and gas have had negative impact on econ...
For about three decades now, development economics researchers have consistently claimed that third ...
This paper’s purpose was to look at why the Democratic Republic of the Congo faces consistent econom...
Corruption is considered an important driver of the resource curse in developing countries. Based on...
Natural resources can have a negative impact on the economy through corruption and civil conflict. T...
The notion of the ‘resource curse’ suggests that large inflows of extractive industry revenues cause...
Since the breakup of the colonial empires following World War II, many newly independent states have...
Many resource rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
There has been increasing interest in the so-called ‘resource curse’, that is the tendency of resour...
Many resource-rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
Many resource-rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
The resource curse is a theory which argues that rather than being a conduit for development natural...
The natural resource curse thesis is that the blessing/windfall of "nature's gifts" tends to be a c...
Angola is an oil-exporting state characterized by great wealth inequality, political instability, an...
Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abu...
In many developing countries, natural resources such as oil and gas have had negative impact on econ...
For about three decades now, development economics researchers have consistently claimed that third ...
This paper’s purpose was to look at why the Democratic Republic of the Congo faces consistent econom...
Corruption is considered an important driver of the resource curse in developing countries. Based on...
Natural resources can have a negative impact on the economy through corruption and civil conflict. T...
The notion of the ‘resource curse’ suggests that large inflows of extractive industry revenues cause...
Since the breakup of the colonial empires following World War II, many newly independent states have...
Many resource rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
There has been increasing interest in the so-called ‘resource curse’, that is the tendency of resour...
Many resource-rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
Many resource-rich countries have experienced a range of negative economic and political effects fro...
The resource curse is a theory which argues that rather than being a conduit for development natural...
The natural resource curse thesis is that the blessing/windfall of "nature's gifts" tends to be a c...
Angola is an oil-exporting state characterized by great wealth inequality, political instability, an...
Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abu...
In many developing countries, natural resources such as oil and gas have had negative impact on econ...
For about three decades now, development economics researchers have consistently claimed that third ...
This paper’s purpose was to look at why the Democratic Republic of the Congo faces consistent econom...