Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Challenges in Natural Resource Abundant Countries Qatar’s Macro-fiscal Framework: A Technical Workshop 23 to 25 January 2011, Qatar Michael Lewin Many economists focus on a counter intuitive notion of natural resource abundance ….. The resource curse …… and all that. In Qatar this idea probably not going to be taken seriously and with good reason Still thinking – briefly - about how some economists view this may yield some insights Resource abundant countries vary in shapes and sizes which makes comparison difficult: e.g. Norway and Nigeria. “Curse” is also often not well defined. (eg. Book by Gelb and others: “Oil Windfalls: Blessing or Curse?” Question frequently not answered nor defined.) Refining the question: did the current generation benefit while future ones did not? Growth rates and levels – if growth slows is that bad? (Current generation is usually the poorest.) Do countries lose ground or just momentum? What is the correct indicator of welfare – consumption rather than income? (e.g. Botswana – consumption is currently around 50% of GDP, so consumption could increase to normal levels if income/capita remains constant) Empirical evidence not clear either (Sachs and Warner key “resource curse” proponents on basis of regression analysis.) Objections: 1.causality: many poor countries are resource dependent because they have failed to grow; 2. dependence versus abundance – many resource abundant countries are no longer dependent because they have grown. Recent work (some of it at WB) has given much reason to doubt the S-W thesis. Nevertheless: some things stand out – since WWII, no resource exporter among miracle growth economies. Indeed (with the exception of Botswana) fastest growing countries were relatively resource poor: Japan plus 4 (S.K, S, H.K. and T) So, even if resources are not a curse, many countries may not have done as well as they could have (should have……) What are the keys to success? Why would they be different from any other (developing) country? E.g. Would policy prescription be different for mineral or resource countries compared to non-resource-abundant: fiscal prudence? (Is this more important in resource dependent countries?) trade policy? The focus of public investment on infrastructure, education, health, etc.? Industrial policy? Financial sector development? And so on. Critics raise the following arguments: Dutch disease: the real appreciation retards industrialization of non-hydro traded goods. Why is this bad? Externalities. Enclaves and linkages. Natural resources don’t stimulate growth on non-resource sectors. Not entirely persuasive – why doesn’t gov’t investment raise productivity and why are “linkages” more stimulating than linkages stimulated by non-traded goods expenditure (e.g. construction)? Two areas where there may be a case for different policies: 1. Volatility: are natural resource economies more prone to boom and bust cycles? This creates uncertainty via real exchange rates and other variables (also gov’t stop-go investment) (Declines of industries difficult/costly to reverse. Though, question de-industrialization claim!) 2. Exhaustibility: inter-generational allocation Solution: expenditure smoothing or self-insurance. (De-linking expenditure and current revenue.) Since gov’t is the conduit of revenues via expenditure it eliminates real appreciation; dampens the cycles; and, transfers some wealth/income to the future. (Aside, saving generally can be viewed as insurance against short-run shocks (unforseen) and long-run income loss (resource depletion.) Aside 2: a current account surplus means “undervalued” currency in the sense of what would balance bop, which in turn means a transfer of consumption/expenditure to future generations. Some difficult issues: Uncertainty: never easy to distinguish “permanent” from “transitory” income. When is a price rise/fall permanent? How risk averse should a government be? How much weight should future generations be given? What should be the target: a given level of consumption (a minimum guaranteed)? a given %ge of gdp? Or, the growth rate of consumption? Many other issues in the calculation of permanent income. No general answer to these questions: the general policy (expenditure smoothing) is a guide but the specifics depend on the country’s choice. Related is the question of domestic versus foreign investment – a portfolio question. Where should the income be saved: domestically or offshore? Usually a balance determined by capacity constraints and portfolio diversification. Conclusion: If economic policy is beneficial it will be so in both resource and non-resource dependent economies. The exception: the case that the government and the country as a whole should be net savers (the twin surpluses) is stronger in resource abundant countries.