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Oil Is Not a Curse

Ownership Structure and Institutions in Soviet Successor States

Erika Weinthal author Pauline Jones Luong author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:30th Aug '10

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Oil Is Not a Curse cover

This book argues that these outcomes are linked to the ownership structure that petroleum-rich states choose to manage their wealth.

This book makes two central claims: first, that mineral-rich states are cursed not by their wealth but, rather, by the ownership structure they choose to manage their mineral wealth and second, that weak institutions are not inevitable in mineral-rich states. Each represents a significant departure from the conventional resource curse literature, which has treated ownership structure as a constant across time and space and has presumed that mineral-rich countries are incapable of either building or sustaining strong institutions - particularly fiscal regimes. The experience of the five petroleum-rich Soviet successor states (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, the Russian Federation, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan) provides a clear challenge to both of these assumptions. Their respective developmental trajectories since independence demonstrate not only that ownership structure can vary even across countries that share the same institutional legacy but also that this variation helps to explain the divergence in their subsequent fiscal regimes.

'The author's concluding chapter makes a reasonably, if not overwhelmingly persuasive case about why the resource curse hypothesis is a myth.' Gaurav Sharma, oilholicssynonymous.com

ISBN: 9780521765770

Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 25mm

Weight: 740g

446 pages