2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.eneco.2015.04.005
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Coal mining, economic development, and the natural resources curse

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Cited by 172 publications
(104 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…A related fourth reason for growth to lag is that large scale mining and manufacturing regions are not associated with entrepreneurship and small business development (e.g., in the case of coal mining, see Glaeser et al, 2012 andBetz et al, 2014). The loss of entrepreneurship and small business development can limit local economic growth (Rupasingha and Goetz, 2013), especially in lagging regions (Stephens and Partridge, 2011).…”
Section: Boom-bust and The Natural Resource Cursementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A related fourth reason for growth to lag is that large scale mining and manufacturing regions are not associated with entrepreneurship and small business development (e.g., in the case of coal mining, see Glaeser et al, 2012 andBetz et al, 2014). The loss of entrepreneurship and small business development can limit local economic growth (Rupasingha and Goetz, 2013), especially in lagging regions (Stephens and Partridge, 2011).…”
Section: Boom-bust and The Natural Resource Cursementioning
confidence: 99%
“…(EMSI) with information on county employment and earnings disaggregated at 4--digit NAICS level. EMSI data have been successfully used in various studies in recent years (Betz et al, 2015;Dorfman et al, 2011;Fallah et al, 2011;Fallah et al, 2014;Nolan et al, 2011). This allows us to measure oil--and gas--extraction employment, as well as other sectors of interest, more precisely (especially in calculating our energy and industry mix terms).…”
Section: Estimation Approach Variables and Data Sourcesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, Haggerty et al (2014) found that in counties where energy resource extraction was a short event, income per capita was indeed positively influenced. However a longer term specialisation in energy resource extraction can lead to an overall negative effect in average per capita income, due to decreased entrepreneurship and limited growth in other areas of coal-dominated economies (Betz et al, 2015).…”
Section: A Framework To Understand Impacts Of Energy Extraction On Homentioning
confidence: 99%