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Corruption, the resource curse and genuine saving

Simon Dietz, Eric Neumayer () and Indra de Soysa

Environment and Development Economics, 2007, vol. 12, issue 01, pages 33-53

Abstract: Genuine saving is a measure of net investment in produced, natural and human capital. It is a necessary condition for weak sustainable development that genuine saving not be persistently negative. However, according to data provided by the World Bank, resource-rich countries are systematically failing to meet this condition. Alongside the well-known resource curse on economic growth, resource abundance might have a negative effect on genuine saving. In fact, the two are closely related, as future consumption growth is limited by insufficient genuine saving now. In this paper, we apply the most convincing conclusion from the literature on economic growth that it is institutional failure that depresses growth to data on genuine saving. We regress gross and genuine saving on three indicators of institutional quality in interaction with an indicator of resource abundance. The indicators of institutional quality are corruption, bureaucratic quality and the rule of law. We find that reducing corruption has a positive impact on genuine saving in interaction with resource abundance. That is, the negative effect of resource abundance on genuine saving is reduced as corruption is reduced.

Date: 2007
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Working Paper: Corruption, the Resource Curse and Genuine Saving (2005) Downloads
Working Paper: Corruption, the Resource Curse and Genuine Saving (2004) Downloads
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