This paper compares Mauritius and Trinidad and Tobago which have a very similar climate, history, institutional framework, ethnic composition, size, etc., but are different in the natural resources they possess. Trinidad and Tobago has achieved a higher per capita GDP based on its petrodollars, but Mauritius has achieved a more robust and stable growth path and a diversified economy based on an export-oriented economic strategy. Trinidad and Tobago is highly dependent on the world market prices for oil and gas and engages in a smaller variety of economic activities, giving it a worse perspective for its future economic development. It appears that this curse is mainly working through Dutch disease effects
Natural resources are generally considered to be very important for development of any country. Sach...
Competing explanations of the resource curse are tested using panel data. The data support the exist...
Prior research has found that countries rich in resources grow slower than countries with few natura...
Historically, small economies, especially resource-rich ones, underperformed on average relative to ...
Shortly after oil production commenced in 2004, Timor-Leste became one of the most oil dependent cou...
This thesis examines three plausible explanations for the natural resource curse phenomenon– the Dut...
This paper aims to review the concept of resource curse, to summarize key points from existing liter...
This article provides a critical survey of the resource curse—the idea that mineral and fuel abundan...
It might be intuitively expected that resource-abundant countries possess economic advantages (other...
This paper summarizes and extends previous research that has shown evidence of a `curse of natural r...
Defense date: 29/11/2010Examining Board: Prof. Arpad Abraham, EUI Prof Rick van der Ploeg, supervi...
An important connection between recent attempts to understand the determinants of economic growth an...
Natural resource rents, development assistance and unrequited foreign exchange inflows such as remit...
The thesis includes three essays in the content of the natural resource curse. The first essay revis...
The African continent is endowed with rich natural resources, including minerals and fossil fuels. P...
Natural resources are generally considered to be very important for development of any country. Sach...
Competing explanations of the resource curse are tested using panel data. The data support the exist...
Prior research has found that countries rich in resources grow slower than countries with few natura...
Historically, small economies, especially resource-rich ones, underperformed on average relative to ...
Shortly after oil production commenced in 2004, Timor-Leste became one of the most oil dependent cou...
This thesis examines three plausible explanations for the natural resource curse phenomenon– the Dut...
This paper aims to review the concept of resource curse, to summarize key points from existing liter...
This article provides a critical survey of the resource curse—the idea that mineral and fuel abundan...
It might be intuitively expected that resource-abundant countries possess economic advantages (other...
This paper summarizes and extends previous research that has shown evidence of a `curse of natural r...
Defense date: 29/11/2010Examining Board: Prof. Arpad Abraham, EUI Prof Rick van der Ploeg, supervi...
An important connection between recent attempts to understand the determinants of economic growth an...
Natural resource rents, development assistance and unrequited foreign exchange inflows such as remit...
The thesis includes three essays in the content of the natural resource curse. The first essay revis...
The African continent is endowed with rich natural resources, including minerals and fossil fuels. P...
Natural resources are generally considered to be very important for development of any country. Sach...
Competing explanations of the resource curse are tested using panel data. The data support the exist...
Prior research has found that countries rich in resources grow slower than countries with few natura...