Investigating the Transmission Channels behind Dutch Disease Effects : Lessons from Mongolia Using a CGE Model
This paper uses a computable general equilibrium model -- Maquette for Millennium Development Goal Simulations (MAMS) -- calibrated to Mongolia to investigate how the development of major mining projects leads to Dutch disease. The simulations sugg...
| Main Authors: | , | 
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| Format: | Working Paper | 
| Language: | English en_US  | 
| Published: | 
        
      World Bank, Washington, DC    
    
      2017
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| Subjects: | |
| Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/360391504722434946/Investigating-the-transmission-channels-behind-Dutch-disease-effects-lessons-from-Mongolia-using-a-CGE-model http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28360  | 
| Summary: | This paper uses a computable general
            equilibrium model -- Maquette for Millennium Development
            Goal Simulations (MAMS) -- calibrated to Mongolia to
            investigate how the development of major mining projects
            leads to Dutch disease. The simulations suggest that the
            process is complex, with the relative strength of the
            different spending and resource movement channels determined
            by structural features of the economy, such as factor input
            needs of the mining sector and substitution elasticities,
            and how mineral windfalls are eventually spent. In Mongolia,
            mining sector demand for domestic factor inputs explains
            two-thirds of the appreciation of the real exchange rate,
            with demand for labor, a "quasi-fixed" factor, the
            most potent channel for transmitting Dutch disease. The
            simulations also suggest that public policies may only play
            a limited role in limiting Dutch disease, even if growing
            fiscal revenues are channeled toward productivity-enhancing
            public investment rather than public consumption or lower
            taxes. This finding suggests that policy makers face real
            trade-offs, namely that, as an equilibrium response, Dutch
            disease is unavoidable and at odds with an export-led,
            manufacturing-oriented development strategy unless resources
            are left in the ground (or mining earnings are saved
            abroad). If the objective is to limit Dutch disease, then
            the simulations point to policies that minimize the usage of
            domestic inputs by the mining sector, or that accommodate
            the growing demand for key inputs such as labor e.g. through
            immigration. Regarding spending, policy makers should
            channel mining revenues toward public investment, to expand
            the economy's long-run supply potential. Where large
            direct income flows from the mining sector to households are
            important, monetary policy may be more useful than fiscal
            policy in constraining private spending. | 
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