The Nordic Model and the Oil Nation
Author(s) -
Roberto Iacono
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
ssrn electronic journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1556-5068
DOI - 10.2139/ssrn.2703816
Subject(s) - generosity , economics , productivity , natural resource , welfare , labour economics , unit (ring theory) , resource (disambiguation) , revenue , inequality , windfall gain , demographic economics , macroeconomics , market economy , ecology , computer network , philosophy , mathematical analysis , mathematics education , theology , mathematics , accounting , biology , computer science
This paper investigates the long-run economic effects of large natural resource endowments, through a comparative quantitative case study. Focusing on three economic features of the so-called Nordic model, namely low income inequality, high labour productivity growth, and high welfare spending,this study estimates the shocks to these key features in Norway after the country became one of the world's largest oil exporters. A synthetic control unit constructed by weighting Nordic countries that resemble the economy of Norway without being oil producers provides the most reliable comparisonunit to estimate the causal effects constituting the papers threefold contribution. First, results show that the resource windfall contributed to relatively higher top income shares, adding natural resources to the set of drivers of income inequality in Norway. Second, the resource windfall boostedlabour productivity. Third, resource revenues contributed to
financing the steadily increasing gap between Norway and other Nordic countries in the degree of welfare generosity. Sensitivity tests through in-time placebo tests and difference-in-differences estimations confi
rm the validity of theseresults
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