Title: GEOG 2400 GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT
1GEOG 2400 - GEOGRAPHY OF WORLD DEVELOPMENT
- Natural Resources and the
- Resource Curse Theory
Spring 2002
2Natural Resources
- Thousands of years of history and the
geographical concentration of technology and
wealth has meant that having natural resources no
longer appears to be a key to prosperity. - Some of the wealthiest nations have negligible
natural resource bases (Japan, Luxembourg,
Switzerland) and some of the most resource rich
are very poor (Angola, Zaire/Congo, PNG). - However, access to resources, particularly oil
and important minerals, nevertheless remains
critical and helps govern foreign and
macroeconomic policy decisions of resource
importers.
3Places along Rostows model of how nations
become developed
- Industrialized nations
- Newly industrialized and Emerging developing
nations - Developing nations with resources to export
- Developing nations with little basis for economic
growth
(Prentice Hall Geotutor CD-Rom 1999)
4Resources and Development
- If one accepts Rostows model of how nations
developed, raw materials often played a
significant role (e.g. wool for textiles, coal
and iron-ore for manufactures) in the build-up to
take-off. - Thus, in theory, those developing nations with
abundant natural resources could eventually
achieve take-off by exporting, reinvesting their
incomes in wealth creation (processing,
manufacturing and, increasingly,
infromation/high-tech!) - Some structuralists (those who believe in the
core-periphery model persisting from colonial
times), however, view natural resources in the
post-colonial world to have been a liability for
some nations - the so-called resource-curse
theory. - They use empirical data to point out how in many
cases, being well endowed with natural resources
has proven to be a barrier to achieving economic
development for a given nation.
5Reliance on single exports (one export only
would 1.0)
- Many developing nations are heavily reliant on
one or two exports, leaving them very vulnerable
(http//www.geohive.com/global/ec_natres.php).
(Prentice Hall Geotutor CD-Rom 1999)
6The resource curse
- The resource curse theory is a somewhat circular,
chicken-egg debate. - Many resource-rich countries in the post-colonial
world have failed to take advantage of their
resource riches (especially in Latin America,
Africa). - They failed to adopt macro-economic policies that
stimulated industry, etc., relying on resource
earnings and little diversification. - To maximize export revenues, governments
overvalued their currencies (see my
notes/posting), making imports less expensive and
exports more expensive.
7Resource curse consequences
- Governments routinely ran budget deficits based
on over-optimistic estimates of future revenues
from raw materials. - This in turn helped create debt, siphoning
capital from potential, growth inducing
investment and infrastructure development in
order to make repayments. - The longer a country participated in the
core-periphery relationship and resource
export-driven economic model, the harder it
became to get away from their reliance on raw
materials as the sole source of income. - There was already a legacy from colonialism of
different nations having independently developed
capacity in the same natural resource production
(e.g. copper, rubber). - Out of their own economic interests, the
industrialized nations continued to encourage
rapid development of raw materials and their
exportation, creating competition and driving
down world prices.
8Growth without resources?
- Relatively speaking, the E. Asian success
stories, Singapore, Thailand, Korea, etc. have
limited resource bases (even land - i.e.
population densities are high). - This is also true for China please note (explains
many foreign policy experts concerns about
Chinas worldview). - According to the World Bank, compared to world
averages, per capita availability of agricultural
land 25, grazing land 50, forests 15,
water 33. - Chinas massive population is a large factor in
these numbers and is of particular concern
relative to the long-term sustainability of
Chinas economy, especially considering the
environmental deterioration that is occurring.
9Building Wealth Requires Discipline
- The newly industrialized nations short on
resources built wealth on long-range,
manufacture-oriented macroeconomic policies. - Development experts raise the issue of cultural,
geographical and historical differences that have
been instrumental in favoring the so-called Asian
Tigers. - First, several have Confucian-type philosophies,
willing to sacrifice current consumption for
future welfare strict policies high savings,
taxes, investments deferred demand for
manufactures. - Second, they could readily secure resources from
other developing countries and from Australia.
10Other differences about Asian NICs
- Third, they benefited from geographical locations
close to major shipping routes and with easy
marine access to Japanese, American and European
markets. - Fourth, unlike Latin America, populations were
largely rural at the beginning, and low-paid
workers flooded to new factories as the urban
process began. - In contrast, Latin Americas relatively advanced
state of development may have hindered its
success, since as the global market place
expanded, nations sought to protect domestic
industries and jobs, increasing costs, making
Asia more competitive e.g. Argentina, at the turn
of the century, was the worlds 3rd richest
nation it still thinks this way according to
observers and this is part of its modern economic
woes). - In Africa, many nations were hamstrung by lack of
transport infrastructure, land-locked status,
civil war and lack of investment in diversified
economies.
11Resources versus diversification
- Historical economic data has shown that the
demand for raw materials does not grow as fast as
the demand for consumer goods as global wealth
increases, further accentuating the gap between
the core and periphery. - New technology, in theory a tool to eliminate
borders and comparative advantages of
resource-rich and resource-poor nations, will
likely intensify economic power in the hands of
industrialized nations due to the relative speeds
at which it is adopted and changes, and the
protectionist measures taken by the developers
with respect to intellectual property, etc. - Look at relative statistics on computers, phone
lines, internet, for example the current HDR is
full of discussions of high and bio-technology
and its potential role in future development
attainment.
12A level playing field is unlikely
13Resources and the Environment
- A move to greater environmental sustainability,
recycling and reduction of waste, will adversely
affect some resource-based economies (as it has
with bauxite, copper), at least in the medium
term because less raw materials will be needed
and growth in demand will slow, even reverse. - Many nations have over-tapped many of their
renewable resources - lumber, fish stocks and
soils - which will lead to declining production
for many years, if not permanently. - Environmental degradation caused by resource
exploitation is affecting the economic viability
of other key sectors such as tourism (e.g. coral
reef destruction from polluted runoff) or
biotechnology (e.g. destruction of potential
genetic resources that would have been discovered
in logged rainforests).