Overcoming the ''Resource Curse'': Prioritizing Policy Interventions in Countries with Large Extractive Industries


 

Publication Date: October 2006

Publisher: Pardee Rand Graduate School

Author(s): Amber Linea Moreen

Research Area: Economics

Type: Report

Abstract:

Natural resource extraction brings with it many incentives for resource wealth to be diverted to non-productive uses. The purpose of this research is to develop contingent guidelines for state and non-state actors interested in improving the management of natural resource revenues. In particular, it seeks to distill guidelines regarding the design and management of policies to mitigate the political and economic risks often accompanying natural resource windfalls in less-developed countries, thereby enabling implementation of well-understood macroeconomic and welfare improvements in such resource-endowed countries. The research focuses on ensuring that the relationships underlying the mismanagement of natural resource revenues are well understood, evaluating the available policy options, and discerning the policy levers accessible to state and non-state actors interested in resource-dependent countries. The analysis lends new insight into how to keep these countries on the road to prosperity, or redirect them toward it. The author provides policy options to guide bureaucrats, international institutions, aid agencies, investors, and nongovernmental organizations seeking to help developing countries hedge against the dangers that can accompany large surges of wealth.