Do natural resources abundance and human capital development promote economic growth? A study on the resource curse hypothesis in Next Eleven countries
Environmental effects of industries and plants
9. Industry and infrastructure
Next Eleven
1. No poverty
Natural resources rent
02 engineering and technology
TD194-195
Environmental sciences
Resource curse hypothesis
13. Climate action
8. Economic growth
11. Sustainability
0202 electrical engineering, electronic engineering, information engineering
Human capital
GE1-350
DOI:
10.1016/j.resenv.2021.100018
Publication Date:
2021-03-18T22:03:41Z
AUTHORS (7)
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 are found to synthesize economic growth. Besides, another interesting finding in this study shows that human capital and natural resources jointly exert positive impacts on economic growth. Hence, it can be said that human capital development assists to mitigate the resource curse impacts in the case of the Next Eleven countries. Therefore, these findings necessitate the pertinence of boosting investments in human capital development, enhancing the strength of the financial sector, expediting industrialization, facilitating technological innovation, and amplifying international trade volumes for achieving higher economic growth in the Next Eleven countries. More importantly, human capital development should be prioritized for transforming the curse of the natural resources into blessing for these nations.
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