The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom

The commodity price boom from 2004–2014 was a huge economic opportunity for African countries abundant in oil, gas and minerals. During this period their government revenues from resources grew by an average of 1.1 billion US$ per year, and economi...

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Main Authors: Cust, James, Ballesteros, Alexis Rivera, Zeufack, Albert
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC : World Bank 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099250407062241649/IDU0b75f6a280775e041420816b0734e6d9ed810
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37653
id okr-10986-37653
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-376532022-07-08T05:10:41Z The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom Cust, James Ballesteros, Alexis Rivera Zeufack, Albert AFRICA NATURAL RESOURCES GROWTH COMMODITIES POVERTY RESOURCE CURSE The commodity price boom from 2004–2014 was a huge economic opportunity for African countries abundant in oil, gas and minerals. During this period their government revenues from resources grew by an average of 1.1 billion US$ per year, and economic growth in those same resource-rich countries surged. GDP growth in resource-rich countries accelerated from 4.6% to 5.4% as countries entered a decade long period of sustained high commodity prices. Nonetheless, the paper traces a significant missed opportunity for resource-rich countries in Africa, with little to show for it in the post-boom period, which saw growth collapse far below pre-boom levels, to 2.7% per annum. This paper considers the record of performance during the boom (2004–2014) and subsequent bust from 2015 onwards. The paper describes four main outcomes of the boom: 1) measures of resource dependency rose in Sub-Saharan Africa during the boom, 2) the growth record was strong during the boom but collapsed once commodity prices fell, 3) poverty and inequality rose during the boom despite strong GDP growth, 4) resource-rich countries failed to diversify both their exports and their asset base, leaving them poorly prepared for the end of the boom and a period of lower commodity prices and subsequent COVID-19 pandemic. The conclusions are stark. During this golden decade of sustained high commodity prices and booming revenues, there was limited re-investment of those revenues into building sustainable assets for the future. In other words, countries consumed the boom, rather than successfully transformed their economies. The conclusion is that many resource-rich countries in the region squandered their “once in a generation” opportunity for economic transformation, offering policy lessons that may prove valuable as we enter a new period of elevated commodity prices. 2022-07-07T17:32:23Z 2022-07-07T17:32:23Z 2022-07 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099250407062241649/IDU0b75f6a280775e041420816b0734e6d9ed810 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37653 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;10120 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC : World Bank Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa
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 AFRICA
NATURAL RESOURCES
GROWTH
COMMODITIES
POVERTY
RESOURCE CURSE
spellingShingle AFRICA
NATURAL RESOURCES
GROWTH
COMMODITIES
POVERTY
RESOURCE CURSE
Cust, James
Ballesteros, Alexis Rivera
Zeufack, Albert
The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
geographic_facet Africa
relation Policy Research Working Paper;10120
description The commodity price boom from 2004–2014 was a huge economic opportunity for African countries abundant in oil, gas and minerals. During this period their government revenues from resources grew by an average of 1.1 billion US$ per year, and economic growth in those same resource-rich countries surged. GDP growth in resource-rich countries accelerated from 4.6% to 5.4% as countries entered a decade long period of sustained high commodity prices. Nonetheless, the paper traces a significant missed opportunity for resource-rich countries in Africa, with little to show for it in the post-boom period, which saw growth collapse far below pre-boom levels, to 2.7% per annum. This paper considers the record of performance during the boom (2004–2014) and subsequent bust from 2015 onwards. The paper describes four main outcomes of the boom: 1) measures of resource dependency rose in Sub-Saharan Africa during the boom, 2) the growth record was strong during the boom but collapsed once commodity prices fell, 3) poverty and inequality rose during the boom despite strong GDP growth, 4) resource-rich countries failed to diversify both their exports and their asset base, leaving them poorly prepared for the end of the boom and a period of lower commodity prices and subsequent COVID-19 pandemic. The conclusions are stark. During this golden decade of sustained high commodity prices and booming revenues, there was limited re-investment of those revenues into building sustainable assets for the future. In other words, countries consumed the boom, rather than successfully transformed their economies. The conclusion is that many resource-rich countries in the region squandered their “once in a generation” opportunity for economic transformation, offering policy lessons that may prove valuable as we enter a new period of elevated commodity prices.
format Working Paper
author Cust, James
Ballesteros, Alexis Rivera
Zeufack, Albert
author_facet Cust, James
Ballesteros, Alexis Rivera
Zeufack, Albert
author_sort Cust, James
title The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
title_short The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
title_full The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
title_fullStr The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
title_full_unstemmed The Dog that Didn’t Bark : The Missed Opportunity of Africa’s Resource Boom
title_sort dog that didn’t bark : the missed opportunity of africa’s resource boom
publisher Washington, DC : World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099250407062241649/IDU0b75f6a280775e041420816b0734e6d9ed810
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37653
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