Version of RecordMany authors have written about the "resource curse" where countries with large abundance of mineral resources have a consistent pattern of slow growing economies. Through the use of a logistic regression, that employs corruption perception index, economic freedom index, gross domestic product per capita, unemployment and oil exports; this paper finds that there is not causal relationship between country's oil exports and the corruption perception. Nevertheless, other factors used in the model such as the economic freedom and level of development show a strong correlation with the country's corruption perception.Riveras, J. (2007, October). Do Oil Exports Increase the Perception of Corruption? Presented at the Academy of In...
An important economic paradox in the economic literature is that countries with abundant natural res...
This paper aims to investigate whether oil revenues in the MENA region lead to economic growth or wh...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
Many resource-rich developing nations experience low levels of economic growth despite their large r...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
An important economic paradox in the economic literature is that countries with abundant natural res...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
This paper explores the idea of regime switching as a new methodological approach to bring new insig...
This research investigated the effective economic growth determinants using a panel data set over th...
This paper examines the resource curse hypothesis both within and between countries of different dem...
The objective of this paper is to revisit the resource curse hypothesis both within and between coun...
As petroleum extraction and consumption has steadily increased in recent decades, economists and dev...
This research investigated the effective economic growth determinants using a panel data set over th...
Since the breakup of the colonial empires following World War II, many newly independent states have...
This paper explores the idea of regime switching as a new methodological approach to bring new insig...
An important economic paradox in the economic literature is that countries with abundant natural res...
This paper aims to investigate whether oil revenues in the MENA region lead to economic growth or wh...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...
Many resource-rich developing nations experience low levels of economic growth despite their large r...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
An important economic paradox in the economic literature is that countries with abundant natural res...
The examination of the relationship between oil resources and economic growth reveals that oil curse...
This paper explores the idea of regime switching as a new methodological approach to bring new insig...
This research investigated the effective economic growth determinants using a panel data set over th...
This paper examines the resource curse hypothesis both within and between countries of different dem...
The objective of this paper is to revisit the resource curse hypothesis both within and between coun...
As petroleum extraction and consumption has steadily increased in recent decades, economists and dev...
This research investigated the effective economic growth determinants using a panel data set over th...
Since the breakup of the colonial empires following World War II, many newly independent states have...
This paper explores the idea of regime switching as a new methodological approach to bring new insig...
An important economic paradox in the economic literature is that countries with abundant natural res...
This paper aims to investigate whether oil revenues in the MENA region lead to economic growth or wh...
There is an adage about wealth and democracy that says “the more well-to-do a nation, the greater th...