Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Performance—A Literature Review

HTML  Download Download as PDF (Size: 497KB)  PP. 148-155  
DOI: 10.4236/cus.2013.14016    7,601 Downloads   14,522 Views  Citations

ABSTRACT

It would be a major error to take the decade of the 1970s as the prototype for minerals-based development. The resource curse hypothesis seems anomalous as development economics, since on the surface it has no clear policy implication, but stands as a sad prediction. Minerals are not a curse at all in the sense of inevitability; the curse, where it exists, is self-fulfilling. Needless to say, policies and institutions have to be framed to local circumstances, country by country. But with good intentions and innovative thinking, there is no reason why resource-rich countries need fall prey to the curse.

Share and Cite:

Roy, B. , Sarkar, S. and Mandal, N. (2013) Natural Resource Abundance and Economic Performance—A Literature Review. Current Urban Studies, 1, 148-155. doi: 10.4236/cus.2013.14016.

Copyright © 2024 by authors and Scientific Research Publishing Inc.

Creative Commons License

This work and the related PDF file are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.