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http://Commodity Prices, Growth, and the Natural Resource Curse: Reconciling a Conundrum
Paul
Collier,
CSAE, Oxford University
Benedikt
Goderis,
CSAE, Oxford University
WPS/2007-15
ABSTRACT: Currently, evidence on the ‘resource curse’ yields a conundrum. While there is much crosssection
evidence to support the curse hypothesis, time series analyses using vector
autoregressive (VAR) models have found that commodity booms raise the growth of
commodity exporters. This paper adopts panel cointegration methodology to explore longer
term effects than permitted using VARs. We find strong evidence of a resource curse.
Commodity booms have positive short-term effects on output, but adverse long-term effects.
The long-term effects are confined to “high-rent”, non-agricultural commodities. We also find
that the resource curse is avoided by countries with sufficiently good institutions. We test the
channels of the resource curse proposed in the literature and find that a substantial part of it is
explained by high public and private consumption, low or inefficient total investment, and an
overvalued exchange rate. Our results fully account for the cross-section results in the seminal
paper by Sachs and Warner (1995).
SUGGESTED CITATION: Paul Collier and Benedikt Goderis,
"http://Commodity Prices, Growth, and the Natural Resource Curse: Reconciling a Conundrum"
(August 1, 2007).
The Centre for the Study of African Economies Working Paper Series.
Working Paper 274.
http://www.bepress.com/csae/paper274
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