Whether it is fair to characterize natural resource wealth as a curse is still debated. Most of the evidence derives from cross-country analyses, providing cases both for and against a potential resource curse. Scholars are increasingly turning to within-country evidence to deepen our understanding of the potential drivers, and outcomes, of resource wealth effects. Moving away from cross-country studies offers new perspectives on the resource curse debate and can help overcome concerns regarding endogeneity. Therefore, scholars are leveraging datasets that provide greater disaggregation of economic responses and exogenous identification of impacts. This article surveys the literature on these studies of local and regional effects of natural...
The extraction of natural resources can lead to higher incomes and standards of living for local are...
Countries with rich natural resource endowments suffer from lower economic growth and various other ...
This thesis consists of five stand-alone chapters empirically evaluating questions relating to the l...
The relationship between resource extraction activity and economic growth has been widely studied in...
Why are some economies likely to grow more slowly when facing natural resource windfalls? What are t...
The relationship between resource extraction activity and economic growth has been widely studied in...
There is a strand of the economics literature that considers the regionalized economic effects of na...
The cross-country empirical evidence for the natural resource curse is ample, but unfortunately frau...
Common sense and economic theory suggest large revenues from natural resource projects should genera...
Research consistently shows that natural resource dependence tends to be associated with lower econo...
This thesis presents three core chapters examining different aspects of the relationship between nat...
In this paper, we examine data on U.S. GDP/Capita and natural resource share of GDP by state. We th...
Most evidence for the resource curse comes from cross-country growth regressions suffers from a bias...
The paper investigates the existence of a natural resource curse, from a within-country perspective....
The paper investigates the existence of a natural resource curse, from a within-country perspective....
The extraction of natural resources can lead to higher incomes and standards of living for local are...
Countries with rich natural resource endowments suffer from lower economic growth and various other ...
This thesis consists of five stand-alone chapters empirically evaluating questions relating to the l...
The relationship between resource extraction activity and economic growth has been widely studied in...
Why are some economies likely to grow more slowly when facing natural resource windfalls? What are t...
The relationship between resource extraction activity and economic growth has been widely studied in...
There is a strand of the economics literature that considers the regionalized economic effects of na...
The cross-country empirical evidence for the natural resource curse is ample, but unfortunately frau...
Common sense and economic theory suggest large revenues from natural resource projects should genera...
Research consistently shows that natural resource dependence tends to be associated with lower econo...
This thesis presents three core chapters examining different aspects of the relationship between nat...
In this paper, we examine data on U.S. GDP/Capita and natural resource share of GDP by state. We th...
Most evidence for the resource curse comes from cross-country growth regressions suffers from a bias...
The paper investigates the existence of a natural resource curse, from a within-country perspective....
The paper investigates the existence of a natural resource curse, from a within-country perspective....
The extraction of natural resources can lead to higher incomes and standards of living for local are...
Countries with rich natural resource endowments suffer from lower economic growth and various other ...
This thesis consists of five stand-alone chapters empirically evaluating questions relating to the l...