We analyze how a country's political institutions affect oil production within its borders. We find a pronounced negative relationship between political openness and volatility in oil production, with democratic regimes exhibiting less volatility than more autocratic regimes. This relationship holds across a number of robustness checks including using different measures of political conditions, instrumenting for political conditions and using several measures of production volatility. Political openness also affects other oil market outcomes, including total production as a share of reserves. Our findings have implications both for interpreting the role of institutions in explaining differences in macroeconomic development and for understan...
This paper examines the resource curse hypothesis both within and between countries of different dem...
Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abu...
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...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
Oil consumption has varied significantly among democracies, but scholars have not systematically stu...
Oil consumption has varied significantly among democracies, but scholars have not systematically stu...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
This paper evaluates the existence of a resource curse on political regimes using the Synthetic Cont...
This dissertation is about the institutional choices governments make to manage their petroleum weal...
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...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
This paper examines the resource curse hypothesis both within and between countries of different dem...
Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abu...
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...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
Oil consumption has varied significantly among democracies, but scholars have not systematically stu...
Oil consumption has varied significantly among democracies, but scholars have not systematically stu...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
This paper evaluates the existence of a resource curse on political regimes using the Synthetic Cont...
This dissertation is about the institutional choices governments make to manage their petroleum weal...
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...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
We estimate the long-run effects of oil wealth on development by exploiting spatial variation in sed...
This paper examines the resource curse hypothesis both within and between countries of different dem...
Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abu...
This study re-examines the validity of oil-hinders-democracy hypothesis by comparing the long-term e...