A DUAL-TRACK DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR SAUDI ARABIA

An economic irony that is gaining increasing attention is the 'resource curse' effect, whereby many of the poorest and most troubled states in the developing world have paradoxically the highest levels of natural wealth. In fact, a growing body of literature that suggests resource wealth i...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of energy and development 2005-04, Vol.30 (2), p.171-186
1. Verfasser: Looney, Robert E.
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container_title The Journal of energy and development
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creator Looney, Robert E.
description An economic irony that is gaining increasing attention is the 'resource curse' effect, whereby many of the poorest and most troubled states in the developing world have paradoxically the highest levels of natural wealth. In fact, a growing body of literature that suggests resource wealth itself, especially where it accounts for the bulk of government revenues as in the case of the so-called 'rentier states,' may harm a country's prospects for development. National growth data bear this out: rentier states with greater natural resource wealth tend to grow more slowly than their resource-poor counterparts.
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source HeinOnline Law Journal Library; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing
subjects Economic development
Economic resources
Employment
Exporters
Financial investments
Government budgets
Infrastructure investments
Investment strategies
Private sector
Public investments
title A DUAL-TRACK DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY FOR SAUDI ARABIA
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