4.7 Article

Natural resources and educational attainment: Evidence from Chile

Journal

RESOURCES POLICY
Volume 76, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.resourpol.2022.102573

Keywords

Natural resources; Education; Exports boom

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This empirical study examines the relationship between natural resource abundance and educational attainment using data from Chilean municipalities. The findings suggest that higher natural resource exports are associated with lower educational attainment, primarily due to fewer enrollments in tertiary education by young people. These results highlight the potentially detrimental effect of natural resource abundance on long-term human capital accumulation.
This paper empirically addresses the relationship between natural resource abundance and educational attainment. Using information for Chilean municipalities between 2000 and 2013, we exploit aggregate changes in natural resource exports and differences in local markets exposure to these changes to assess whether local specialization patterns are related with educational outcomes. Our findings indicate that higher natural resource exports reduce educational attainment, in particular by discouraging young people from enrolling in tertiary education. The effect is robust and quantitatively important. Our findings are consistent with the idea that natural resource abundance may have positive effects in the short-run, but may be detrimental for long-run human capital accumulation.

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