The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development

Many low and middle-income mineral-rich countries have experienced strong growth for a decade or longer, propelled by a rapid expansion of their mineral exports and a rise in prices of these commodities. This sustained strong economic performance g...

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Main Authors: McMahon, Gary, Moreira, Susana
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014
Subjects:
GAS
GDP
OIL
TAX
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19435144/contribution-mining-sector-socioeconomic-human-development
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18660
id okr-10986-18660
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTABILITY
ALUMINUM
AMOUNT OF EXPLORATION
APARTHEID
AVERAGE GROWTH RATE
AVERAGE GROWTH RATES
BENEFICIATION
CASE STUDIES
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
COAL
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY PRICES
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONVENTIONAL WISDOM
COPPER
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
CORRUPTION
COUNTRY DATA
CURRENCY
DEMOCRACY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
DEVELOPMENT PATHS
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DUTCH ECONOMY
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC LINKAGES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE
EXPORT SECTOR
EXPORTS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES
EXTRACTIVE RESOURCES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FISCAL POLICY
FLUCTUATIONS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
GAS
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL MARKETS
GOLD
GOLD MINE
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
GOVERNANCE PERFORMANCE
GOVERNANCE REFORM
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH PERFORMANCE
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GUARANTEE OF SUCCESS
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME LEVELS
INCOME TAX
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INEQUALITY
INEQUALITY MEASURES
INFLATION
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
IRON
IRON ORE
LARGE MINING
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
LOW INCOME
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC REFORM
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MEASURING GOVERNANCE
METALS
MIDDLE INCOME
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY
MINE WORKERS
MINERAL BOOMS
MINERAL DEPENDENCE
MINERAL ECONOMIES
MINERAL EXPORTS
MINERAL INDUSTRIES
MINERAL PRICES
MINERAL PROJECTS
MINERAL RESOURCES
MINERAL WEALTH
MINERALS
MINES
MINING AREA
MINING AREAS
MINING COMPANIES
MINING COUNTRIES
MINING INDUSTRY
MINING INVESTMENT
MINING INVESTMENTS
MINING OPERATION
MINING OPERATIONS
MINING POLICIES
MINING PRODUCTION
MINING PROJECTS
MINING REGIONS
MINING ROYALTIES
MINING SECTOR
MINING SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
MINING SECTOR REFORM
MULTIPLIER EFFECTS
NATIONAL CURRENCY
NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCE ABUNDANCE
NATURAL RESOURCE CURSE
NATURAL RESOURCE INTENSITY
NATURAL RESOURCE WEALTH
NATURAL RESOURCES
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
OIL
OUTPUT
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PER CAPITA INCOMES
PLATINUM
PLATINUM MINING
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POLITICAL STABILITY
PRICE VOLATILITY
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH
RAPID EXPANSION
RAPID GROWTH
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
REGULATORY QUALITY
RENT SEEKING
RENT-SEEKING BEHAVIOR
RESOURCE ABUNDANCE
RESOURCE BASE
RESOURCE DEPENDENCE
RESOURCE RENTS
RESOURCE-DEPENDENT COUNTRIES
RESOURCE-POOR COUNTRIES
RESOURCE-RICH COUNTRIES
REVENUE STREAMS
RICH ECONOMIES
RULE OF LAW
SAVINGS
SMELTER
SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
STABILITY AGREEMENTS
STAGNATION
SUSTAINABILITY
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TERMS OF TRADE
TRADE BARRIERS
TRANSPARENCY
UNDERDEVELOPMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNPROCESSED MINERALS
VALUATION
VALUE ADDED
WEALTH
spellingShingle ACCOUNTABILITY
ALUMINUM
AMOUNT OF EXPLORATION
APARTHEID
AVERAGE GROWTH RATE
AVERAGE GROWTH RATES
BENEFICIATION
CASE STUDIES
CITIZENS
CIVIL SOCIETY
COAL
COMMODITIES
COMMODITY
COMMODITY PRICES
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
COMPETITIVENESS
CONVENTIONAL WISDOM
COPPER
CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY
CORRUPTION
COUNTRY DATA
CURRENCY
DEMOCRACY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRY
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
DEVELOPMENT PATHS
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DIRECT INVESTMENT
DUTCH ECONOMY
ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC LINKAGES
ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC PROGRESS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE
EXPORT SECTOR
EXPORTS
EXTERNALITIES
EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES
EXTRACTIVE RESOURCES
FINANCIAL CRISIS
FISCAL POLICY
FLUCTUATIONS
FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT
FOREIGN EXCHANGE
FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS
GAS
GDP
GLOBAL ECONOMY
GLOBAL MARKETS
GOLD
GOLD MINE
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
GOVERNANCE PERFORMANCE
GOVERNANCE REFORM
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
GROWTH PERFORMANCE
GROWTH RATE
GROWTH RATES
GUARANTEE OF SUCCESS
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
INCOME
INCOME LEVELS
INCOME TAX
INDUSTRIALIZATION
INEQUALITY
INEQUALITY MEASURES
INFLATION
INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS
INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS
IRON
IRON ORE
LARGE MINING
LIVING STANDARDS
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
LOW INCOME
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY
MACROECONOMIC REFORM
MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES
MEASURING GOVERNANCE
METALS
MIDDLE INCOME
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES
MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY
MINE WORKERS
MINERAL BOOMS
MINERAL DEPENDENCE
MINERAL ECONOMIES
MINERAL EXPORTS
MINERAL INDUSTRIES
MINERAL PRICES
MINERAL PROJECTS
MINERAL RESOURCES
MINERAL WEALTH
MINERALS
MINES
MINING AREA
MINING AREAS
MINING COMPANIES
MINING COUNTRIES
MINING INDUSTRY
MINING INVESTMENT
MINING INVESTMENTS
MINING OPERATION
MINING OPERATIONS
MINING POLICIES
MINING PRODUCTION
MINING PROJECTS
MINING REGIONS
MINING ROYALTIES
MINING SECTOR
MINING SECTOR DEVELOPMENT
MINING SECTOR REFORM
MULTIPLIER EFFECTS
NATIONAL CURRENCY
NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE
NATURAL RESOURCE
NATURAL RESOURCE ABUNDANCE
NATURAL RESOURCE CURSE
NATURAL RESOURCE INTENSITY
NATURAL RESOURCE WEALTH
NATURAL RESOURCES
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
OIL
OUTPUT
PARTICULAR COUNTRY
PER CAPITA INCOMES
PLATINUM
PLATINUM MINING
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POLITICAL STABILITY
PRICE VOLATILITY
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH
RAPID EXPANSION
RAPID GROWTH
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
REGULATORY QUALITY
RENT SEEKING
RENT-SEEKING BEHAVIOR
RESOURCE ABUNDANCE
RESOURCE BASE
RESOURCE DEPENDENCE
RESOURCE RENTS
RESOURCE-DEPENDENT COUNTRIES
RESOURCE-POOR COUNTRIES
RESOURCE-RICH COUNTRIES
REVENUE STREAMS
RICH ECONOMIES
RULE OF LAW
SAVINGS
SMELTER
SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
STABILITY AGREEMENTS
STAGNATION
SUSTAINABILITY
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
SUSTAINABLE GROWTH
TAX
TAX REVENUES
TAX SYSTEM
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
TERMS OF TRADE
TRADE BARRIERS
TRANSPARENCY
UNDERDEVELOPMENT
UNEMPLOYMENT
UNPROCESSED MINERALS
VALUATION
VALUE ADDED
WEALTH
McMahon, Gary
Moreira, Susana
The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
relation Extractive industries for development series;no. 30
description Many low and middle-income mineral-rich countries have experienced strong growth for a decade or longer, propelled by a rapid expansion of their mineral exports and a rise in prices of these commodities. This sustained strong economic performance goes against the accepted wisdom that even though the mining sector, like other extractive industries, can generate foreign exchange and fiscal revenues, it contributes little to sustained economic growth and, by extension, human development. Through the presentation of trends and patterns of various indicators, this paper shows that in addition to economic growth, countries rich in minerals other than oil have experienced significant improvements in their human development index (HDI) scores that are on average better than those experienced by countries without minerals. In a sample of five low and middle-income countries with relatively long histories of mining, benefits came from foreign direct investment (FDI), export revenues, and fiscal revenues. The overall impact of the mining sector was much stronger if there were infrastructure benefits and strong linkages to other industries, especially through domestic procurement. Contrary to the notion that there are no jobs in mining, in this small sample, employment related to the mining sector was very high in countries where linkages were strong, even before the multiplier and fiscal expenditure impacts were accounted for. Cooperation between the public and private sectors seemed essential to increasing such linkages. In addition, mining firms often made substantial contributions to local and regional development, at times due to legal requirements but often not. All five countries have either relatively high HDIs (compared with neighboring countries) or strongly improving HDIs.
format Publications & Research :: Working Paper
author McMahon, Gary
Moreira, Susana
author_facet McMahon, Gary
Moreira, Susana
author_sort McMahon, Gary
title The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
title_short The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
title_full The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
title_fullStr The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
title_full_unstemmed The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development
title_sort contribution of the mining sector to socioeconomic and human development
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19435144/contribution-mining-sector-socioeconomic-human-development
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18660
_version_ 1764441773258571776
spelling okr-10986-186602021-04-23T14:03:47Z The Contribution of the Mining Sector to Socioeconomic and Human Development McMahon, Gary Moreira, Susana ACCOUNTABILITY ALUMINUM AMOUNT OF EXPLORATION APARTHEID AVERAGE GROWTH RATE AVERAGE GROWTH RATES BENEFICIATION CASE STUDIES CITIZENS CIVIL SOCIETY COAL COMMODITIES COMMODITY COMMODITY PRICES COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE COMPETITIVENESS CONVENTIONAL WISDOM COPPER CORPORATE SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY CORRUPTION COUNTRY DATA CURRENCY DEMOCRACY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING COUNTRY DEVELOPMENT AGENCY DEVELOPMENT PATHS DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES DIRECT INVESTMENT DUTCH ECONOMY ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC LINKAGES ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC PROGRESS ECONOMIES OF SCALE EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTIONS ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE EXPORT SECTOR EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES EXTRACTIVE RESOURCES FINANCIAL CRISIS FISCAL POLICY FLUCTUATIONS FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT FOREIGN EXCHANGE FOREIGN GOVERNMENTS GAS GDP GLOBAL ECONOMY GLOBAL MARKETS GOLD GOLD MINE GOOD GOVERNANCE GOVERNANCE INDICATORS GOVERNANCE PERFORMANCE GOVERNANCE REFORM GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES GUARANTEE OF SUCCESS HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCOME INCOME LEVELS INCOME TAX INDUSTRIALIZATION INEQUALITY INEQUALITY MEASURES INFLATION INFRASTRUCTURE DEVELOPMENT INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS INSTITUTIONAL QUALITY INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS IRON IRON ORE LARGE MINING LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL COMMUNITIES LOW INCOME LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MACROECONOMIC INSTABILITY MACROECONOMIC REFORM MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES MEASURING GOVERNANCE METALS MIDDLE INCOME MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRIES MIDDLE-INCOME COUNTRY MINE WORKERS MINERAL BOOMS MINERAL DEPENDENCE MINERAL ECONOMIES MINERAL EXPORTS MINERAL INDUSTRIES MINERAL PRICES MINERAL PROJECTS MINERAL RESOURCES MINERAL WEALTH MINERALS MINES MINING AREA MINING AREAS MINING COMPANIES MINING COUNTRIES MINING INDUSTRY MINING INVESTMENT MINING INVESTMENTS MINING OPERATION MINING OPERATIONS MINING POLICIES MINING PRODUCTION MINING PROJECTS MINING REGIONS MINING ROYALTIES MINING SECTOR MINING SECTOR DEVELOPMENT MINING SECTOR REFORM MULTIPLIER EFFECTS NATIONAL CURRENCY NATIONAL INFRASTRUCTURE NATURAL RESOURCE NATURAL RESOURCE ABUNDANCE NATURAL RESOURCE CURSE NATURAL RESOURCE INTENSITY NATURAL RESOURCE WEALTH NATURAL RESOURCES NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS OIL OUTPUT PARTICULAR COUNTRY PER CAPITA INCOMES PLATINUM PLATINUM MINING POLICY IMPLICATIONS POLITICAL ECONOMY POLITICAL INSTABILITY POLITICAL STABILITY PRICE VOLATILITY PRIMARY EDUCATION PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS RAPID ECONOMIC GROWTH RAPID EXPANSION RAPID GROWTH REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT REGULATORY QUALITY RENT SEEKING RENT-SEEKING BEHAVIOR RESOURCE ABUNDANCE RESOURCE BASE RESOURCE DEPENDENCE RESOURCE RENTS RESOURCE-DEPENDENT COUNTRIES RESOURCE-POOR COUNTRIES RESOURCE-RICH COUNTRIES REVENUE STREAMS RICH ECONOMIES RULE OF LAW SAVINGS SMELTER SOCIOECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT STABILITY AGREEMENTS STAGNATION SUSTAINABILITY SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT SUSTAINABLE GROWTH TAX TAX REVENUES TAX SYSTEM TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TERMS OF TRADE TRADE BARRIERS TRANSPARENCY UNDERDEVELOPMENT UNEMPLOYMENT UNPROCESSED MINERALS VALUATION VALUE ADDED WEALTH Many low and middle-income mineral-rich countries have experienced strong growth for a decade or longer, propelled by a rapid expansion of their mineral exports and a rise in prices of these commodities. This sustained strong economic performance goes against the accepted wisdom that even though the mining sector, like other extractive industries, can generate foreign exchange and fiscal revenues, it contributes little to sustained economic growth and, by extension, human development. Through the presentation of trends and patterns of various indicators, this paper shows that in addition to economic growth, countries rich in minerals other than oil have experienced significant improvements in their human development index (HDI) scores that are on average better than those experienced by countries without minerals. In a sample of five low and middle-income countries with relatively long histories of mining, benefits came from foreign direct investment (FDI), export revenues, and fiscal revenues. The overall impact of the mining sector was much stronger if there were infrastructure benefits and strong linkages to other industries, especially through domestic procurement. Contrary to the notion that there are no jobs in mining, in this small sample, employment related to the mining sector was very high in countries where linkages were strong, even before the multiplier and fiscal expenditure impacts were accounted for. Cooperation between the public and private sectors seemed essential to increasing such linkages. In addition, mining firms often made substantial contributions to local and regional development, at times due to legal requirements but often not. All five countries have either relatively high HDIs (compared with neighboring countries) or strongly improving HDIs. 2014-06-12T21:26:28Z 2014-06-12T21:26:28Z 2014-04 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/04/19435144/contribution-mining-sector-socioeconomic-human-development http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18660 English en_US Extractive industries for development series;no. 30 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Working Paper