Publication:
Evidence for a Presource Curse?: Oil Discoveries, Elevated Expectations, and Growth Disappointments

dc.contributor.author Cust, James
dc.contributor.author Mihalyi, David
dc.contributor.author Cust, James
dc.date.accessioned 2017-07-19T18:08:35Z
dc.date.available 2017-07-19T18:08:35Z
dc.date.issued 2017-07
dc.description.abstract Oil discoveries can constitute a major positive and exogenous shock to economic activity, but the resource curse hypothesis would suggest they might also be detrimental to growth over the long run. This paper utilizes a new methodology for estimating growth underperformance to examine the extent to which discoveries depress the growth path of a country following a discovery and prior to production starting. The study finds causal evidence of a significant negative effect on short-run growth and growth relative to counterfactual forecast growth in countries with weak institutions, creating growth disappointments prior to private and public resource windfalls. This effect is termed the presource curse. For a giant oil or gas discovery in 1988-2010, the study estimates an average growth disappointment effect of 0.83 percentage points, measured as the average annual gap between forecast and actual growth over the five years following a discovery. Further, the estimated effect varies by the size of the discovery, increasing to a 1.77 percentage points gap in the case of super giant discoveries. The estimated effect is inversely related to the quality of political institutions, and driven by countries with lower institutional quality at the time of the discovery, consistent with the similar long-run results documented in the resource curse literature. For countries with below-threshold institutional quality, the growth disappointment effect is larger, measured as 1.35 percentage points in annual terms. There is no measured growth disappointment effect for countries with strong institutions. Using the synthetic control method, we confirm our findings for a selection of countries above and below the institutional quality threshold. The findings suggest that studies of the resource curse that focus only on the effects of resource exploitation or examine only long-run growth effects may overlook important short-run growth disappointments following discoveries, and the way countries respond to news shocks. en
dc.identifier http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/517431499697641884/Evidence-for-a-presource-curse-oil-discoveries-elevated-expectations-and-growth-disappointments
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27643
dc.language English
dc.language.iso en_US
dc.publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8140
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder World Bank
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
dc.subject OIL REVENUE
dc.subject RESOURCE CURSE
dc.subject ECONOMIC GROWTH
dc.subject FORECASTING
dc.subject INSTITUTIONS
dc.subject RESOURCE WINDFALL
dc.title Evidence for a Presource Curse? en
dc.title.subtitle Oil Discoveries, Elevated Expectations, and Growth Disappointments en
dc.type Working Paper en
dc.type Document de travail fr
dc.type Documento de trabajo es
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.crossref.title Evidence for a Presource Curse? Oil Discoveries, Elevated Expectations, and Growth Disappointments
okr.date.disclosure 2017-07-10
okr.doctype Publications & Research
okr.doctype Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
okr.docurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/517431499697641884/Evidence-for-a-presource-curse-oil-discoveries-elevated-expectations-and-growth-disappointments
okr.identifier.doi 10.1596/1813-9450-8140
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum 090224b084dc6273_3_0
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum 27713519
okr.identifier.report WPS8140
okr.imported true
okr.language.supported en
okr.pdfurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/517431499697641884/pdf/WPS8140.pdf en
okr.statistics.combined 3548
okr.statistics.dr 517431499697641884
okr.statistics.drstats 2996
okr.topic Public Sector Development :: Public Sector Economics
okr.topic Energy :: Energy and Natural Resources
okr.topic Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Commodities
okr.topic Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Economic Forecasting
okr.topic Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Economic Growth
okr.topic Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Economic Theory & Research
okr.unit Office of the Chief Economist, Africa Region; and the Natural Resource Governance Institute
relation.isAuthorOfPublication d9bfc517-057d-4b18-af03-f95cae13355a
relation.isSeriesOfPublication 26e071dc-b0bf-409c-b982-df2970295c87
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