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Natural Resource Wealth & Economic Development Overview of Selected Issues Jan Gottschalk TAOLAM This training activity is funded with grants from Japan. Overview I. Some Basic Issues II. Key Factors for the Role of Natural Resources in Development III. Macroeconomic Management of Natural Resource Inflows 1

I. Some Basic Issues 1. Why Do Natural Resources Matter? It has implications for environment! It can have an impact on poverty! It is big! There may be governance concerns It gives budget revenues! It has impact on economic growth! 2

Resource Exports Are Important for Lao PDR 3,500 Exports of Goods (in millions of US$) 3,000 2,500 2,000 1,500 1,000 Total exports of goods Resource exports 500 0 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 and in terms of non-resource GDP. 30% Resource Exports in % of Non-Resource GDP 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 3

Large increase in resource exports over past ten years has been driven by gold and copper exports, but electricity exports will become very important going forward: 3,000 2,500 Resource Exports (in millions of US$) 2,000 1,500 1,000 500 Total electricity exports Total mining exports 0 2019 2017 2015 2013 2011 2009 2007 2005 2003 The contribution of the resource sector to fiscal revenue collection has been sizeable: 16,000 14,000 12,000 10,000 8,000 6,000 4,000 2,000 0 Fiscal Revenue Collection (in Billions of Kip) Total revenues Resource revenues 2011/12 2010/11 2009/10 2008/09 2007/08 2006/07 2005/06 2004/05 2003/04 4

2. Who Owns the Natural Resources? 3. Natural Resources: A Blessing? 5

Or a Curse? A Look at Other Countries Experience 6

II. Key Factors for the Role of Natural Resources in Development Natural Resources, Institutions and Governance Three hypothesis how natural resource wealth may undermine quality of institutions: Strong, market-based institutions are more likely to arise in natural resource-poor economies Competition for natural resources emphasizes fault lines in society, potentially even leading to civil war Even in less extreme cases, competition for natural resources can lead to corruption that undermines institutions and governance, and thereby growth 7

Natural Resources and Institutions Natural resource-rich economies induce political contest to capture ownership of these resources, leading to institutions that foster authoritarianism, state control and inequality In natural resource-poor economies, government must motivate people to create wealth, leading to more market-oriented institutions Fault Lines in Society Example: Sierra Leone and blood diamonds a large, young underclass was drawn into warring over control of artisanal diamond fields, arming them and plunging the country into a vicious civil war The war spilled over to Liberia, which had its own class divisions that were amplified by blood diamonds 8

Natural Resources and Corruption Substantial empirical evidence that point source resources such as oil, other minerals, plantation crops, coffee and cocoa undermine institutions and growth, with corruption being a key issue Important remedy: transparency (e.g., Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative [EITI]) Volatility of Natural Resource Prices This matters for growth because volatility generates uncertainty, which is bad for growth economic upheaval during the bust-phase can have long-term negative consequences Commodity Price Volatility (Change in %) 60.0 40.0 20.0 0.0-20.0-40.0 2012A1 2010A1 2008A1 2006A1 2004A1 2002A1 2000A1 1998A1 1996A1 1994A1 Metal commodity price index (US$), change in % Consumer prices in advanced economies, change in % 9

Dutch Disease but in the longer term the Dutch manufacturing sector bounced back and overall growth period was strong. Hence, Dutch disease may not be fatal, with treatment options available. 10

Symptoms of Dutch Disease Real exchange rate appreciation IMF Lao P.D.R Article IV consultations: Sharp real exchange rate appreciation threatens to erode external competitiveness further. Real Effective Exchange Rates 1/ (Index, March 2005=100) 160 Lao PDR Vietnam China ASEAN-4 150 140 130 120 110 100 90 Mar-05 Mar-06 Mar-07 Mar-08 Mar-09 Mar-10 Mar-11 Mar-12 Mar-13 1/ ASEAN-4 includes Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Thailand. Crowding out of non-natural resource exports and decline in tradable sector production Long-term negative impact on growth? 50% 45% 40% 35% 30% 25% 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Composition of Industry Value-Added (% of GDP, 2002 Prices) Construction Gas, electricity, water Mining and quarrying Manufacturing 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 11

What Is the Harm? Decline in tradable sector reflects change in sectoral composition i of the economy: natural resource boom leads to demand for nontradables, especially services, that cannot be imported and must be produced locally this in itself is not harmful! Harm arises when decline in tradable sector has large negative social impact, and/or when tradable sector is a special source of growth (industrialization) III. Macroeconomic Management of Natural Resource Inflows 12

Managing Natural Resource Volatility Fiscal spending of natural resource inflows is often the single-most important link between the natural resource sector and the rest of the economy Consequently, delinking fiscal expenditures from natural resource revenue inflows goes a long way to insulate economy from natural resource revenue volatility Alternative: countercyclical fiscal and monetary policies Stability-Oriented Fiscal Policy Experience from Mongolia: this macro-fiscal management is made harder by the intense lobbying and electoral cycle in an increasingly oligarchic and populist democracy as Mongolia, given the legal and institutional weaknesses. Therefore, ensuring optimal degree of saving and investment calls for additional, more effective arrangement of institution buttressing. 13

Institutional Arrangements Institutional arrangements help to lock in commitment to stability-oriented fiscal policy. Budget rule, e.g., aim for (i) stable non-mining deficit in percent of non-mining GDP or (ii) stable growth rate of real expenditures Institutionalize savings of natural resource inflows through Sovereign Wealth Fund, with a rule for stable outflows to finance budget expenditures Addressing Dutch-Disease Disease Effects The spending decision drives the real appreciation, which in turn leads to the other aforementioned Dutchdisease effects. Hence, addressing Dutch-disease effects is again mostly a fiscal policy issue; composition of spending matters as well. In principle, monetary policy can neutralize effect of fiscal spending on real appreciation, but this would lead to private-sector crowding out. 14

Why Is Spending of Natural Resource Inflows Associated with Real Appreciation? A numerical example Refresher: GDP = Consumption + Investment + Exports Imports Absorption = Consumption + Investment Starting point: No inflow of natural resource inflows Public absorption: $20 Private absorption: $80 Public Spending / Absorption Private absorption Assumptions: Numerical example (continued) Scenario 1: Natural resource revenues of $10 flow in to the government, which spends those entirely. No supply response (i.e., GDP is unchanged) No change in non-resource exports or imports [and no change in exchange rate!] Remember that Absorption = GDP (X-M) Total Absorption is unchanged Public absorption can increase only if private absorption declines: private sector crowding out Private absorption Public Spending / Absorption Increase in expenditures 15

Numerical example (continued) Scenario 2: As before, natural resource revenues of $10 flow in to the government, which spends those entirely. In addition, non-resource trade deficit widens in line with natural resource inflows. Assumptions: No supply response (i.e., GDP is unchanged) Non-resource trade deficit widens by $10 Total Absorption increases No more crowding out of private sector Private absorption Public Spending / Absorption Increase in expenditures Increase in absorption The resource boom in Lao P.D.R. went indeed along with a widening of the non-resource current account deficit: 30% Resource Exports and Non-Resource Current Account (in % of Non-Resource GDP) 20% 10% 0% -10% -20% -30% Resource exports Non-resource current account balance -40% 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 16

Numerical example (continued) Widening of non-resource trade deficit in scenario 2 allows increase in public expenditures without crowding out private sector expenditures. Why would non-resource trade deficit widen? Trade balance depends directly on consumption and investment spending (income effect) Trade balance depends on real exchange rate (price effect) Response of Trade Balance to Spending of Natural Resource Inflows: Income Effect Government spends directly on imported goods (imported equipment, fuel, etc): Trade deficit rises but extent of increase in but extent of increase in trade deficit depends on import share of government spending 17

Response of Trade Balance to Spending of Natural Resource Inflows: Price Effect Case 1: Flexible exchange rate Central bank sells all of the natural resource 160.0 foreign exchange inflows 140.0 to the market: 120.0 Nominal (and real) 100.0 exchange rate appreciates Imports become cheaper 80.0 and exports more expensive Tradable production REER (+ appreciation) declines & non-tradable production increases Trade deficit increases Exchange Rate Indices Lao P.D.R. (2005:1=100) Jan-03 Nov-03 Sep-04 Jul-05 May-06 Mar-07 Jan-08 Nov-08 Sep-09 Jul-10 May-11 Mar-12 Jan-13 Exchange rate (US$/kip; + appreciation) Response of Trade Balance to Spending of Natural Resource Inflows: Price Effect (continued) Case 2: Fixed exchange rate Government spending raises demand for non-tradables, leading to increase in inflation: Real exchange rate appreciates Imports become cheaper and exports more expensive Tradable production declines & non-tradable production increases Trade deficit increases 18

Response of Trade Balance to Spending of Natural Resource Inflows: Bottom Line Government spending of natural resource revenues will lead approximately to a similar increase in the non-resource trade deficit: Partly this happens directly through the import content of government spending, Partly this happens through a real appreciation, which takes place either under a flexible or fixed exchange rate regime unless the central bank actively tries to prevent the real appreciation from taking place Widening of non-resource current account deficit in response to real appreciation is clearly visible in Lao: REER and Current Account Balance in Lao P.D.R. 160 140 120 100 80 60 40 20 0 0% -5% -10% -15% -20% -25% -30% -35% REER (+ appreciation) left axis Non-resource current account balance in % of non-res GDP (right axis) 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 19

Policy Options to Prevent Real Appreciation If policy makers come to the conclusion that they want to prevent the real appreciation because of the loss of competitiveness this entails for the tradable sector, discussion above suggests following options: Don t spend all of the natural resource revenues, save some! If you have to spend them, aim for a high import content of spending Consider using public investment to bolster competitiveness, thereby offsetting some of the effect of the real appreciation Finally, central bank can pursue a tight monetary policy stance that offsets demand expansion, but this comes at the cost of significant private sector crowding out. Thank You! 20