Title: The Challenge of Natural Resourceled Development in Small Economies
1The Challenge of Natural Resource-led Development
in Small Economies
- Dr. Maiju Johanna Perälä
- Department of Economics
- The University of the West Indies, Mona
- Prepared for the presentation at
- Association of Caribbean Economists conference
on Economic Growth and TransformationReassessing
Challenges and Prospects at the Datwn of the
21st Century
2Purpose of the paper
- To provide an explanation why growth has failed
in some countries over the long-term, especially
those that are small in size - To investigate whether natural resource endowment
type is relevant as argued within the development
economics literature (Hirschman 1977,1981 Auty
1995, 2001) - To clarify a mechanism that generates (or has
potential to generate) a resource curse, an
important explanation for failing growth in the
post era
3Main arguments and findings
- Natural resource endowment type matters for
growth, or for lack of it, especially when
coexisting with the lack of social cohesion - Oil and mineral resource endowment more
negatively correlated with growth than an
agricultural one - The above findings are robust to different growth
regression specifications (cross-section,
time-series) - The phenomenon is especially troublesome for
small economies as, in addition to the resource
curse phenomenon, they face a greater challenge
for manufacturing development.
4About this presentation
- Stylized facts of growth failures
- Explanations for failureslinkage approach to
staples (development economics approach) - Methodology
- Sample and data sources
- Empirical analysis
- Simple statistical evidence
- Initial conditions analysis
- Robustness regressions
- Conclusions
5Stylized facts of growth failures
- Regionally concentrated Sub-Saharan Africa and
Latin America and the Caribbean - Stage of development is relevant Tend to occur
at early phases of development - Size of the economy matters More likely to occur
in small than large economies
6Regional concentration long term failures
7Regional concentrationrecent failures
8Regional concentrationgrowth successes
9Stage of development
10Relevance of size
11Observations on failures
- Striking patterns persistence and regional
concentration - Raises questions whether common explanation(s)
for these failures can be found - Growth failures appear to have had difficulties
in initiating growth, focus on initial conditions
seems appropriate
12Common explanations for failing growth
- African growth literature
- Lack of openness (SW 1997), poor policies
(CollierGunning 1999). - Ethnic divisions, neighborhood effects (EL 1997,
1998) - Low investment and high population growth
(Hoeffler 2002) - Challenges of economy size
- Relatively small domestic markets, manufacturing
potential requires favorable external market
conditions - More vulnerable to external fluctuations due to
greater exposure - Lack of diversification within the economy, terms
of trade fluctuations stronger effect - Small developing countries more reliant on
primary products that experience greater
volatility
- Natural resource abundance and growth
- Easy riches lead to sloth (Bodin 16th Century)
- Natural resource curse thesis (Auty 1995, Gelb et
al 1998) - Dutch disease (Corden 1984, Neary van
Wijnbergen 1986, Ros 2000) - Terms of trade (Prebisch 1950, Singer 1950)
- Instability (Gelb et al 1988, Tarshis 1986)
- Staples and economic development (Hirschman 1977,
1981) - Analytical survey (Ros 2000)
13Linkages view on development
- Natural resource endowment type matters to
development (Hirschman 1981) - Captures the notion how one thing leads to
another, interdependence of economic activity,
linkages application to natural resource-led
development - Process of growth through various linkages
- Production linkages
- Consumption linkage
- Fiscal linkage
Developmental linkages
14Physical production linkages
Forward linkage
Imported inputs
Production C
Production A
Backward linkage
Domestic production of inputs
Final demand or production B
15Consumption linkage
Final demand
Consumption linkage from labor incomes
Production A via L-intensive methods
Consumption goods industry
Potential backward linkages
Potential forward linkages
16Fiscal linkage
Sociopolitical environment critical
Enhance production linkages
Government
Limited production linkages
Enhance consumption linkages
Production A
Enclave production
Limited consumption linkages
Typical of mineral and fossil fuel extractive
industries
17Challenge of fiscal linkage
- Indirect, it requires
- ability to collect taxes
- well-designed development policy
- capacity to implement the policy and to target
the funds in most productive activities - indirectness leaves room for mistargetting of
funds, or even for their loss through
rent-seeking - Challenge posed by economy size
- management more costly to small economies,
economies of scale not as attainable as for large
ones (ratio of government expenditures/gdp
smaller for large ecos, fixed costs of governance
higher per population for small ones)
18Linkages approach to staples
- The nature of economic activity determines the
relative importance of each linkage - Agricultural production ? labor-intensive, likely
to generate a consumption linkage - Mining and fossil fuel extractive
industries?enclaves - Enclaves, limited production and consumption
linkages, the importance of fiscal linkage is
elevated and the role of political economy
aspects and development policy are brought to the
forefront - Fiscal linkage, critical for small developing
countries rich in extractive natural resources
poses a greater challenge given that it is more
costly, depleting development funds
19Linkage approach continued
- Technological apects of staples can be limiting,
but not deterministic - Sociopolitical environment important
- If environment is conducive to welfare maximizing
policies?limited development potential of a
staple can be overcome through an efficient
management of the fiscal linkage (through
effective development policy)
20Empirical methods
- Simple statistical evidencehighlights the
phenomenon - Initial conditions analysis
- initial real per capita income and education
level - Sachs and Warner (1997) initial conditions
- Cross-country growth regression analysis
- Sachs and Warner (1997), Barro (1991), MRW
(1992), King and Levine (1993), DeLong and
Summers (1991)
21Sample and natural resource data
- 95 market economies with population more than
half a million (sample confirms with established
studies and methods). - Natural resouce endowment categorization
following Auty (2001) - resource rich economiesper capita cropland gt0.3
hectares - extractive (point source) economiesfuel and
mineral exports gt 40 of total exports - agricultural (diffuse) economiesremaining
22Proxying social cohesion and enclave effect
- Social cohesion is considered to capture
sociopolitical environment, proxied by
ethnolinguistic fractionalization (ELF) (EL 1997,
Mauro 1995) - Interaction term between extractive endowment and
ELF should capture enclave effect in a poor
policy environment
23Growth Failures Resource Endowment long term
failures by country
24Growth Resource Endowment failures and
successes by country group
25Growth and Social Fragmentation by Endowment
Type fragmented economies
26Growth and Social Fragmentation by Endowment
Type cohesive economies
27(No Transcript)
28(No Transcript)
29(No Transcript)
30(No Transcript)
31Estimated Growth Effects of Enclave Effect
Table from Perälä (2007)-Resource Flow
Concentration
32Concluding remarks
- Broadens the debate on natural resource abundance
and growth to type of natural resource the
ensuing political economy considerations - Mineral and/or oil richness combined with lack of
social cohesion is found consistently negatively
correlated with growth (distinct growth
experience from agricultural economies) - Brings forth evidence that mere natural resource
richness is not negatively correlated with growth
(rather, coexistence with lack of social cohesion
important for a negative growth outcome) - Empirical results are useful in explaining the
cause of resource curse, highlighting the
importance of political economy aspects - The challenge is especially predominant in small
economies, with smaller domestic market, greater
challenge for manufacturing developing, more
reliance on external markets and greater cost
challenge for the management of the fiscal
linkage.
33Other related contributions
- Perälä, Maiju Johanna. 2007. Explaining Growth
Failures Does the Type of Natural Resource
Endowment Matter? (paper in review) - Perälä, Maiju Johanna. 2007. Resource Flow
Concentration and Social Fractionalization A
Recipe for Curse? Journal of Economic Studies,
35(5), forthcoming - Perälä, Maiju. 2003. Persistence of Growth
Failures Does the Type of Natural Resource
Endowment Matter? UNU/WIDER Discussion Paper 37. - Perälä, Maiju Johanna. 2002. Explaining Growth
Failures An Empirical Investigation of Natural
Resource Type and Growth. In Essays on Economic
Development and Growth, 124-186, University of
Notre Dame dissertation.