This paper provides empirical evidence that mineral resources abundance is associated to preferences for redistribution in the United States. We show that individuals living in states with large mineral resources endowment are more opposed to redistribution than others. We take advantage of both the spatial and the temporal distributions of mineral resources discoveries since 1800 to uncover two mechanisms through which mineral resources can foster ones’ opposition to redistribution: either by transmission of values formed in the past, or by the exposure to mineral discoveries during individuals’ life-time. We show that both mechanisms matter to explain respondents’ preferences
The category of natural resources is commonly taken to comprise anything - whether matter or energy ...
This study examined whether individual preferences for mining projects vary with cultural, regulator...
This paper challenges the determinism of the resource curse hypothesis. It suggests that concerns ab...
This paper provides empirical evidence that mineral resources abundance is associated to preferences...
This paper provides empirical evidence that mineral resources abundance is associated to preferences...
Using mineral resources discoveries in the United States since 1800, we argue that mineral mining fo...
The USA became the world's leading mineral-producing nation between 1870 and 1910, a development par...
This paper explores how individual preferences for redistribution depend on future income prospects....
People's preferences for redistribution are a key component of redistributive policy design, yet how...
Despite rapidly-expanding academic and policy interest in the links between natural resource wealth ...
The literature on mining community preferences for mineral development, which is the basis for engag...
We endow individuals that differ in skill levels and tastes for working with altruistic preferences ...
The category of natural resources is commonly taken to comprise anything - whether matter or energy ...
This study examined whether individual preferences for mining projects vary with cultural, regulator...
This paper challenges the determinism of the resource curse hypothesis. It suggests that concerns ab...
This paper provides empirical evidence that mineral resources abundance is associated to preferences...
This paper provides empirical evidence that mineral resources abundance is associated to preferences...
Using mineral resources discoveries in the United States since 1800, we argue that mineral mining fo...
The USA became the world's leading mineral-producing nation between 1870 and 1910, a development par...
This paper explores how individual preferences for redistribution depend on future income prospects....
People's preferences for redistribution are a key component of redistributive policy design, yet how...
Despite rapidly-expanding academic and policy interest in the links between natural resource wealth ...
The literature on mining community preferences for mineral development, which is the basis for engag...
We endow individuals that differ in skill levels and tastes for working with altruistic preferences ...
The category of natural resources is commonly taken to comprise anything - whether matter or energy ...
This study examined whether individual preferences for mining projects vary with cultural, regulator...
This paper challenges the determinism of the resource curse hypothesis. It suggests that concerns ab...