Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model

This paper extends the World Bank's Long-Term Growth Model (LTGM) with the addition of a natural resource sector to analyze how long-run growth evolves in resource-rich countries and the growth impacts of price shocks and resource discoveries....

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Main Authors: Loayza, Norman V., Galego Mendes, Arthur, Mendez Ramos, Fabian, Pennings, Steven Michael
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/584811647268984881/Assessing-the-Effects-of-Natural-Resources-on-Long-Term-Growth-An-Extension-of-the-World-Bank-Long-Term-Growth-Model
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37162
id okr-10986-37162
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-371622022-03-18T05:10:38Z Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model Loayza, Norman V. Galego Mendes, Arthur Mendez Ramos, Fabian Pennings, Steven Michael COMMODITY PRICE FLUCTUATION OIL SECTOR DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH GROUP FORCE PARTICIPATION RATE COMPOSITION OF GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE OIL RESERVE This paper extends the World Bank's Long-Term Growth Model (LTGM) with the addition of a natural resource sector to analyze how long-run growth evolves in resource-rich countries and the growth impacts of price shocks and resource discoveries. In the LTGM-Natural Resource Extension (LTGM-NR), commodity price shocks affect long-term economic growth through physical investment rates. As a large share of resource income typically accrues to the government, the size of the boost to investment in a price boom depends on the government’s fiscal rule. Fiscal rules that prioritize public investment, like a Hartwick Rule, generally lead to the largest increases in long-term growth. However, structural surplus rules, which save commodity revenues, can also boost growth if they free up savings for private investment. The response of growth to discoveries of natural resources is similar to the response to price shocks, although discoveries also produce a direct effect on real GDP, in addition to an indirect effect through investment. The LTGM¬-NR also captures the effect of other (non-resource) growth fundamentals in resource-rich economies, and it is better suited to general growth analysis in these countries than the standard LTGM. However, the LTGM-NR is a supply-side model, and so does not capture the short-run effects of price and discovery shocks that operate through aggregate demand. 2022-03-17T18:50:48Z 2022-03-17T18:50:48Z 2022-03-14 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/584811647268984881/Assessing-the-Effects-of-Natural-Resources-on-Long-Term-Growth-An-Extension-of-the-World-Bank-Long-Term-Growth-Model http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37162 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic COMMODITY PRICE FLUCTUATION
OIL SECTOR
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH GROUP
FORCE PARTICIPATION RATE
COMPOSITION OF GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
OIL RESERVE
spellingShingle COMMODITY PRICE FLUCTUATION
OIL SECTOR
DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH GROUP
FORCE PARTICIPATION RATE
COMPOSITION OF GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE
OIL RESERVE
Loayza, Norman V.
Galego Mendes, Arthur
Mendez Ramos, Fabian
Pennings, Steven Michael
Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
description This paper extends the World Bank's Long-Term Growth Model (LTGM) with the addition of a natural resource sector to analyze how long-run growth evolves in resource-rich countries and the growth impacts of price shocks and resource discoveries. In the LTGM-Natural Resource Extension (LTGM-NR), commodity price shocks affect long-term economic growth through physical investment rates. As a large share of resource income typically accrues to the government, the size of the boost to investment in a price boom depends on the government’s fiscal rule. Fiscal rules that prioritize public investment, like a Hartwick Rule, generally lead to the largest increases in long-term growth. However, structural surplus rules, which save commodity revenues, can also boost growth if they free up savings for private investment. The response of growth to discoveries of natural resources is similar to the response to price shocks, although discoveries also produce a direct effect on real GDP, in addition to an indirect effect through investment. The LTGM¬-NR also captures the effect of other (non-resource) growth fundamentals in resource-rich economies, and it is better suited to general growth analysis in these countries than the standard LTGM. However, the LTGM-NR is a supply-side model, and so does not capture the short-run effects of price and discovery shocks that operate through aggregate demand.
format Working Paper
author Loayza, Norman V.
Galego Mendes, Arthur
Mendez Ramos, Fabian
Pennings, Steven Michael
author_facet Loayza, Norman V.
Galego Mendes, Arthur
Mendez Ramos, Fabian
Pennings, Steven Michael
author_sort Loayza, Norman V.
title Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
title_short Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
title_full Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
title_fullStr Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
title_full_unstemmed Assessing the Effects of Natural Resources on Long-Term Growth : An Extension of the World Bank Long Term Growth Model
title_sort assessing the effects of natural resources on long-term growth : an extension of the world bank long term growth model
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/584811647268984881/Assessing-the-Effects-of-Natural-Resources-on-Long-Term-Growth-An-Extension-of-the-World-Bank-Long-Term-Growth-Model
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37162
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