This article uses data drawn from Southeast Asia and West Africa to help explain the geographical distribution of foreign investment. Why during late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century globalization did the attributes of abundant natural resources, mass migration and export expansion that attracted large foreign investment to the New World not similarly draw capital to the tropics? I argue that in a number of tropical countries, rich natural resources and cheap labour available through mass migration effectively substituted for foreign borrowing. At the same time, the dominant institution of colonialism throughout Southeast Asia and West Africa limited borrowing from abroad and helped to ensure that even for these resource-rich countri...
Trade is an essential component of a country’s economy. The flow of goods and services across nation...
The article analyzes the use of the land resource potential of countries in the context of globaliza...
Trade reshuffles. No wonder, then, that it doesn’t work as an engine of growth—not for explaining t...
This article uses data drawn from Southeast Asia and West Africa to help explain the geographical di...
Resource-Led Growth - A Long-Term Perspective surveys the 1870-1914 experience of growth in resource...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the nexus between natural resources, gross capital formation...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
Since the seminal work by W. A. Lewis, exports of primary products have been deemed the main or sole...
This paper provides theoretical and empirical insights into the puzzling simultaneous rise in foreig...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Empirical evidence seems to indicate that economic growth since 1965 has varied inversely with natur...
This paper addresses three main questions; how can a country specialized in primary goods become an ...
The rise of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) as resource-rich countries has...
This thesis presents three core chapters examining different aspects of the relationship between nat...
This paper begins by a brief review of empirical evidence that seems to indicate that economic grow...
Trade is an essential component of a country’s economy. The flow of goods and services across nation...
The article analyzes the use of the land resource potential of countries in the context of globaliza...
Trade reshuffles. No wonder, then, that it doesn’t work as an engine of growth—not for explaining t...
This article uses data drawn from Southeast Asia and West Africa to help explain the geographical di...
Resource-Led Growth - A Long-Term Perspective surveys the 1870-1914 experience of growth in resource...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the nexus between natural resources, gross capital formation...
One of the surprising features of modern economic growth is that economies with abundant natural res...
Since the seminal work by W. A. Lewis, exports of primary products have been deemed the main or sole...
This paper provides theoretical and empirical insights into the puzzling simultaneous rise in foreig...
Worldwide materials extraction increased by a factor of 8.4 over the course of the 20th century. In ...
Empirical evidence seems to indicate that economic growth since 1965 has varied inversely with natur...
This paper addresses three main questions; how can a country specialized in primary goods become an ...
The rise of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) as resource-rich countries has...
This thesis presents three core chapters examining different aspects of the relationship between nat...
This paper begins by a brief review of empirical evidence that seems to indicate that economic grow...
Trade is an essential component of a country’s economy. The flow of goods and services across nation...
The article analyzes the use of the land resource potential of countries in the context of globaliza...
Trade reshuffles. No wonder, then, that it doesn’t work as an engine of growth—not for explaining t...