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The 2009 Erik Kempe Prize has been awarded to Christa N. Brunnschweiler and Erwin H. Bulte for their study.“The Resource Curse Revisited and Revised: A Tale of Paradoxes and Red Herrings”, published in Journal of Environmental Economics and Management 55, 248-264, 2008.
The Nomination Committee, composed by Thomas Aronsson (chair), Anne-Sophie Crépin and Partha Dasgupta, has awarded this paper for the following motivation: A new literature has evolved that focuses on the so-called resource curse, which means that resource-rich countries tend to grow more slowly than resource-poor countries. The consensus explanation put forward in earlier literature is that resource-abundance may remove incentives to reform and establish well-functioning institutions by provoking fights over resource rents. This paper re-examines the view that abundant resources lead to bad institutions and slow growth, and challenges the results derived in earlier literature. Whereas earlier literature typically approximates resource-abundance by using a measure of resource-dependence (e.g. resource exports relative to GNP), Brunnschweiler and Bulte make a clear distinction between these two concepts and show, in addition, that measures of resource-dependence are typically not exogenous in the context of economic growth. The results show (i) that resource-dependence is determined by resource-abundance, institutional quality and constitutional factors; (ii) that resource-abundance contributes to higher (not lower) growth; and (iii) that resource-dependence does not affect growth once resource-abundance is controlled for and proper econometric methods are used. |