ECSPReport13 Brown PDF
ECSPReport13 Brown PDF
ECSPReport13 Brown PDF
98
ECSP REPORT
ISSUE 13
20082009
bersome) chapters discussing ways for governments to improve their negotiations with oil
corporations, since greater understanding of
these processesfrom deciding how and when
to privatize, to evaluating the economic conditions of an oil contract, to selecting a skilled
negotiatorcan create more transparency in
the oil industry itself.
The next two sections discuss the ways in
which natural resource management plays a
key role in resource-rich countries once the
taps have been turned on and oil revenue has
started to pour into a country. Part II focuses on
the technical aspects of managing the macroeconomy. It includes a chapter written by Sachs
that unpacks how and when oil wealth can
have deleterious effects on other economic sectors, and recommends specific ways to reverse
this powerful trend. Macartan Humphreys and
Martin Sandbu contribute an engaging and
well-written chapter on using natural resource
funds to push for better management of petroleum revenues in the developing world. These
funds, which often employ escrow accounts,
typically limit governments discretion to spend
oil money, attempting to conserve and direct
the proceeds either by stabilizing oil revenues or
by saving a portion for future use. The authors
conclude that such funds will be sustainable
only if they are accompanied by incentives for
political change.
Part III picks up on this theme by focusing
on the legal and political dimensions of creating
responsible revenue management policies and
practices. In one of the only chapters to focus
on minerals (as opposed to oil), Michael Ross
packs a lot of punch into his examination of the
effects of resource wealth distribution. While it
is popularly believed that mineral wealth creates wider gaps between the rich and poor than
other forms of wealth, he concludes that the
evidence is not yet strong enough to confirm
this. Given the lack of data, Ross calls on states
to focus on creating policies that enable workers to transition from tradable sectors such as
agriculture and manufacturing to nontradable
sectors such as services (no doubt easier said
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ECSP REPORT
ISSUE 13
20082009