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Stiglitz writes: "On average, resource-rich countries have done even more poorly than countries without resources. They have grown more slowly, and with greater inequality - just the opposite of what one would expect."

The discovery of new natural resources in Africa could mean boom or bust. (photo: pearcat/photobucket)
The discovery of new natural resources in Africa could mean boom or bust. (photo: pearcat/photobucket)


From Resource Curse to Blessing

By Joseph Stiglitz, Project Syndicate

08 August 12

 

ew discoveries of natural resources in several African countries - including Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, and Mozambique - raise an important question: Will these windfalls be a blessing that brings prosperity and hope, or a political and economic curse, as has been the case in so many countries?

On average, resource-rich countries have done even more poorly than countries without resources. They have grown more slowly, and with greater inequality - just the opposite of what one would expect. After all, taxing natural resources at high rates will not cause them to disappear, which means that countries whose major source of revenue is natural resources can use them to finance education, health care, development, and redistribution.

A large literature in economics and political science has developed to explain this "resource curse,"and civil-society groups (such as Revenue Watch and the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative) have been established to try to counter it. Three of the curse's economic ingredients are well known:

Resource-rich countries tend to have strong currencies, which impede other exports;

Because resource extraction often entails little job creation, unemployment rises;

Volatile resource prices cause growth to be unstable, aided by international banks that rush in when commodity prices are high and rush out in the downturns (reflecting the time-honored principle that bankers lend only to those who do not need their money).

Moreover, resource-rich countries often do not pursue sustainable growth strategies. They fail to recognize that if they do not reinvest their resource wealth into productive investments above ground, they are actually becoming poorer. Political dysfunction exacerbates the problem, as conflict over access to resource rents gives rise to corrupt and undemocratic governments.

There are well known antidotes to each of these problems: a low exchange rate, a stabilization fund, careful investment of resource revenues (including in the country's people), a ban on borrowing, and transparency (so citizens can at least see the money coming in and going out). But there is a growing consensus that these measures, while necessary, are insufficient. Newly enriched countries need to take several more steps in order to increase the likelihood of a "resource blessing."

First, these countries must do more to ensure that their citizens get the full value of the resources. There is an unavoidable conflict of interest between (usually foreign) natural-resource companies and host countries: the former want to minimize what they pay, while the latter need to maximize it. Well designed, competitive, transparent auctions can generate much more revenue than sweetheart deals. Contracts, too, should be transparent, and should ensure that if prices soar - as they have repeatedly - the windfall gain does not go only to the company.

Unfortunately, many countries have already signed bad contracts that give a disproportionate share of the resources' value to private foreign companies. But there is a simple answer: renegotiate; if that is impossible, impose a windfall-profit tax.

All over the world, countries have been doing this. Of course, natural-resource companies will push back, emphasize the sanctity of contracts, and threaten to leave. But the outcome is typically otherwise. A fair renegotiation can be the basis of a better long-term relationship.

Botswana's renegotiations of such contracts laid the foundations of its remarkable growth for the last four decades. Moreover, it is not only developing countries, such as Bolivia and Venezuela, that renegotiate; developed countries like Israel and Australia have done so as well. Even the United States has imposed a windfall-profits tax.

Equally important, the money gained through natural resources must be used to promote development. The old colonial powers regarded Africa simply as a place from which to extract resources. Some of the new purchasers have a similar attitude.

Infrastructure (roads, railroads, and ports) has been built with one goal in mind: getting the resources out of the country at as low a price as possible, with no effort to process the resources in the country, let alone to develop local industries based on them.

Real development requires exploring all possible linkages: training local workers, developing small and medium-size enterprises to provide inputs for mining operations and oil and gas companies, domestic processing, and integrating the natural resources into the country's economic structure. Of course, today, these countries may not have a comparative advantage in many of these activities, and some will argue that countries should stick to their strengths. From this perspective, these countries' comparative advantage is having other countries exploit their resources.

That is wrong. What matters is dynamic comparative advantage, or comparative advantage in the long run, which can be shaped. Forty years ago, South Korea had a comparative advantage in growing rice. Had it stuck to that strength, it would not be the industrial giant that it is today. It might be the world's most efficient rice grower, but it would still be poor.

Companies will tell Ghana, Uganda, Tanzania, and Mozambique to act quickly, but there is good reason for them to move more deliberately. The resources will not disappear, and commodity prices have been rising. In the meantime, these countries can put in place the institutions, policies, and laws needed to ensure that the resources benefit all of their citizens.

Resources should be a blessing, not a curse. They can be, but it will not happen on its own. And it will not happen easily.


 

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-3 # nirmalandhas 2012-08-08 20:17
...and Joseph does not know why!!!?
 
 
+7 # JH Gordon 2012-08-09 08:16
The answer to the why is simple. I currently live in South America which is stunningly rich in natural resources and renewable (labor based) agriculture.

Governments license outsiders to harvest the wealth of minerals while the native population reap the slavish jobs, pollution, and frontier style rape of their villages and the environment. That is not to mention the fabric of their traditional society.

Agriculture, once fruitful and abundant is sold off by the container ship-loads raising prices and lowering the quality to the population. Big corporations from outside the country are the cause.

You can't blame China for making deals to feed their population; or the US or the EU. But governments make deals that benefit the elite and the poor and tiny middle class suffer. Graft, so-called trade treaties, and corporate imperialism are the reasons. In every country, the guys in power somehow think they own everything.

JH Gordon
Fireclosure
Smashwords
 
 
+9 # brux 2012-08-08 20:32
Americans really need to invest in education and wise up so they can understand how to challenge with facts and logic the foolishness that we have been taught to keep the incompetent greedy elite in power and stealing from the rest of us.

The facts are there, we just need access to them ... these facts need to become as widely discussed as such illogical and idiotic Republican mantras as "Reagan won the Cold War" or "Tax the rich less and it will create jobs" or "the Free Market is what made America so rich".

There was an old Firesign Theater comedy album called "Everything You Know Is Wrong" whose title seemed prescient looking back to the 70's.
 
 
+5 # pbbrodie 2012-08-09 03:48
If there is anything the oligarchy doesn't want, it is an educated populace. Nearly everything the Republicans do, which is very little, while they constantly say no, is designed to reduce education or at the very least make it much more expensive and difficult to obtain. There is an obvious and concerted effort to revert our society to serfdom and the success rate is accelerating rapidly.
You are absolutely correct in that the people of our country better wise up and wake up and do it quickly.
 
 
+6 # Majikman 2012-08-08 21:58
Windfall taxes are great....let's start with the banksters.
 
 
+4 # Rascalndear 2012-08-09 02:54
As usual, lucid, terse arguments from Mr. Stiglitz... wish more would listen to and act on his ideas!
 
 
+6 # maddave 2012-08-09 03:44
Stiglitz makes a number of salient points regarding the non-development of a natural-resourc e-rich nation. However, he skirts around THE major cause of their failure to prosper on all levels: rapacious colonialism-cap italism-mercant ilism.

Quote: Unfortunately, many countries have already signed bad contracts . . . But there is a simple answer: renegotiate; if that is impossible, impose a windfall-profit tax.
That was the precise situation faced by Iran's M. Mossadegh in 1953. The typically rapacious Anglo-Iranian Oil Co (now BP) was raping Iran economically and politically, and when pressured by the democratically elected Mossadegh & Iran's Parliament, , refused to rep-negotiate their imperialistic contract and practices. Consequently Iran nationalized the oil industry. What followed was typical: the CIA deposed Mossadegh; installed the prodigal puppet Shaw on the Peacock Throne; established & trained SAVAK; and handed the oil industry back over to the Brits! .

That ended that . . . and both the USA and Iran have lived with the toxic fall-out for half a century now ... to the point of all-out war.

The history of neo-colonialism is roughly the same in country after country. Buy-off or depose the national leaders and take over the resource on terms unfavorable to the country and its typically impoverished indigenous population.

War is economics taken to another level.
 
 
+2 # Texas Aggie 2012-08-09 11:38
Similar exploits occurred in Central America in defense of United Fruit, and are now occurring in Paraguay in defense of Cargill and the oil companies trying to get into the Chaco. Haiti is an excellent example of what happens to a developing country when its interests are at odds with the interests of foreign corporations.
 
 
+4 # dkonstruction 2012-08-09 05:15
While Stiglitz has been very good on the problems with the US economy and why austerity is not the answer it ia amazing that someone obviously as smart and knowledgeable as he is never mentions the role of the World Bank and IMF (particularly the IMF structural adjustment programs) or the historic role of the developed countries in maintaining underdeveloped nations as producers of raw materials that then have to be exported to be refined and then sold back to these countries as finished products because they are not able to devleop the capacity to do the refining/produc tion of finished goods at home. Stiglitz's article makes it sound like it is all the fault of the resource rich underdeveloped nations which is completely wrong and disengenious at best coming from someone like him who definitely knows better. Stiglitz uses South Korea as an example of a success story but then doesn't mention that South Korea (and other Asian nations) told the World Bank and the IMF to F*$k off and would not submit to their structural adjustment terms.
 
 
+2 # dick 2012-08-09 05:19
I wish Obama had listened to Stiglitz, but he did not because he was busy taking campaign bribes to turn U.S. into Shah's Iran. Class war begins as economics, becomes politics, then FORCE.
We tsk tsk over what corrupt populist leaders do to their own people in Africa & elsewhere, then defend the Perp-in-Chief in DC because he's the leader of Our tribe. Goldman Sachs is to US as Shell Oil is to Nigeria. Tribalism is to US as it is to Kenya. Obama is colonizing US on behalf of UNINDICTED criminals.
 

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