On the Politics and Economics of the Shift from Fossil Fuels to Critical Minerals
Rabah Arezki,
Michael Ross and
Rick van der Ploeg
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Michael Ross: UCLA - University of California [Los Angeles] - UC - University of California
Rick van der Ploeg: University of Oxford
Working Papers from HAL
Abstract:
The global economy is gradually exiting the era of fossil fuels while entering the era of critical minerals. That shift is coming in handy for fossil fuel dependent economies, which have had difficulty diversifying outside the resource sector. It is, indeed, politically and economically expedient for leaders in fossil fuel dependent economies to diversify within the extractive sector instead of moving beyond it. Yet, the massive technological and geopolitical uncertainties associated with the era of critical minerals will make diversification within the extractive sector risky. Adopting fiscal prudence and long-term contracts for critical minerals can partly mitigate the risk but leave open the need to find sustainable engines for economic growth and jobs.
Keywords: natural resources; critical minerals; diversification; politics; uncertainty (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2026-02-10
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