10 research outputs found
Assessment of Institutional Quality in Resource-Rich Caspian Basin Countries
Natural resource dependence is believed to have potential impact on institutional development, and there is growing consensus in the academic literature that institutional weakness is central to the explanation of the negative effects of resource booms. Generally, the quality of institutional framework and natural resource dependence interact mutually. Natural resources rents can damage institutions by removing incentives to conduct reforms and even to establish a well-functioning bureaucracy. Also, weak institutional quality is the ultimate cause for a disadvantageous management framework of natural resources and process of converting revenue flows into economic development. This paper examines the connection between institutional quality and resource dependence in resource-rich Caspian Basin countries (Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Russia, Turkmenistan) with transition economies. The analysis for the total natural resources rents suggests that, in aggregate, revenues on total natural resources have a negative impact on government effectiveness
Azerbaijan’s New Macroeconomic Reality: How to Adapt to Low Oil Prices
Despite the accumulation of significant revenues from crude oil exports and remarkable economic growth
over the past 15 years, Azerbaijan’s economy has been hit hard by the recent drop in global oil prices and
has experienced a period of painful economic adjustments. The government has attempted to change the
traditional distributive approach that is based largely on oil revenue distribution in favor of a new earningoriented
model that is expected to benefit from a robust non-oil sector. It is clear that the oil price slump
caught the government off guard and poorly prepared to cope with the new low price environment. Clearly,
it will be difficult to build a new model of development quickly and thoroughly in a short period of time.
While the availability of the state oil fund reserves mitigates the risk of financial and macroeconomic collapse
in the near future, the effects of a large informal economy make it difficult to regulate the economy
using only conventional instruments, such as money supply and credits. Thus, to be effective, authorities’
anti-crisis measures should be accompanied by institutional and administrative reforms