Journal ArticleOpen Access
Do natural resources abundance and human capital development promote economic growth? A study on the resource curse hypothesis in Next Eleven countries
Authors
Author Affiliations
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, North South University, University of Mediterranean Karpasia, European University of Lefke, ...
Published InResources Environment and Sustainability
Year2021
Citations361
Abstract
This study aims to analyze the effects of natural resources, human capital, financial development, industrialization, technological progress, and international trade on the economic growth of the Next Eleven countries between 1990 and 2019. The novelty of this study lies in its approach to explore the indirect economic growth impacts of human capital development via the transmission channel of the natural resource utilization in these counties. The econometric methods involved are robust for accounting the cross-sectional dependence and slope heterogeneity concerns in the data. The results authenticate the resource curse hypothesis since higher natural resources rent are found to inhibit economic growth of the Next Eleven nations. In contrast, human capital development, financial development, industrialization, technological innovation and international trade participation…
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