4.7 Article

Revisiting the resource curse in the MENA region

Journal

RESOURCES POLICY
Volume 73, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resourpol.2021.102225

Keywords

MENA region; Oil revenue; Economic growth; Political institutions; Panel VAR

Funding

  1. Institute of Financial Economics at the American University of Beirut

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The study found that regardless of the level of democracy in MENA countries, oil revenues contribute to economic growth rather than leading to a resource curse. However, when considering the status of the chief of state, countries with military executives suffer from the resource curse, as oil rents do not lead to economic growth.
The aim of this paper is to investigate whether oil revenues in the MENA region lead to economic growth or whether the resource curse is evident. To do so we employ a panel Vector Auto-Regressive (PVAR) model comprising not only the economic growth and oil revenues but also the government expenditures. The latter variable is considered so as to examine whether the oil revenue leads to economic growth via the fiscal policy channel. We further assess whether heterogeneous findings exist depending on the quality of the political institutions of the MENA countries. Our findings suggest that irrespectively of whether a MENA country is democratic or not, the resource-blessing (rather than the resource curse) is evident. More importantly, though, we show that the resource curse is revealed when we consider the status of the chief of state, i.e., whether it is a military officer or not. In particular, we show that countries with military executives suffer from the resource curse, since the oil rents do not lead to economic growth. A number of alternative measures for the quality of political institutions, sample size and estimation procedures render our findings robust.

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