Resource Curse or Malthusian Trap? Evidence from Oil Discoveries and Extractions

Anca Cotet Grecu, K. Tsui
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引用次数: 41

Abstract

This paper studies the effects of oil rent on development using a unique panel dataset describing worldwide oil discoveries and extractions. First, we revisit the so-called curse of oil, which contends that oil rent hinders economic development. Exploiting cross-country variations in the timing of oil discoveries and the size of initial oil in place, we find that, contrary to the oil-curse hypothesis, there is little robust evidence of a negative relationship between oil endowment and economic performance, even after controlling for initial income. Second, based on both cross-country and panel evidence, we find a robust association between oil abundance and population growth, which might suggest a Malthusian effect which reduces the economic growth measured in per capita GDP. We find some evidence that oil abundance increases fertility. On an accounting basis, however, migration plays an even more prominent role in explaining the oil-induced population growth. Furthermore, we show that focusing on material gain may understate the welfare gain from oil abundance, because relative to non-oil countries, oil-rich countries gain more in health improvements. These results suggest that despite the positive oil effect on population growth, oil-rich countries do not suffer from the Malthusian trap, and overall oil abundance is an economic blessing rather than a curse.
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资源诅咒还是马尔萨斯陷阱?来自石油发现和开采的证据
本文使用一个描述全球石油发现和开采的独特面板数据集研究了石油租金对开发的影响。首先,我们重新审视所谓的石油诅咒,认为石油租金阻碍了经济发展。利用石油发现时间和初始石油储量的跨国差异,我们发现,与石油诅咒假说相反,即使在控制初始收入之后,也几乎没有强有力的证据表明石油禀赋与经济绩效之间存在负相关关系。其次,基于跨国和面板证据,我们发现石油储量与人口增长之间存在强大的关联,这可能表明马尔萨斯效应降低了以人均GDP衡量的经济增长。我们发现一些证据表明,石油储量丰富会提高生育率。然而,在会计基础上,移民在解释石油导致的人口增长方面发挥了更为突出的作用。此外,我们表明,关注物质收益可能低估了石油丰富带来的福利收益,因为相对于非石油国家,石油丰富的国家在健康改善方面获得更多。这些结果表明,尽管石油对人口增长有积极的影响,但石油丰富的国家并没有陷入马尔萨斯陷阱,总体而言,石油丰富对经济是一种祝福,而不是诅咒。
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