
handle: 10419/102364
This paper analyzes resource partnerships and their influence on the environmental quality in a resource-rich country by introducing incomplete contracts, imperfect property rights protection, and a lack of valuation for the environment by the government in the South. Employing numerical simulations, I determine the equilibrium extraction rate, the applied extraction technology, and the environmental quality in dependence of the state of democracy in the resource-rich country. In contrast to what one might expect, under certain circumstances it can be environmentally beneficial to have incomplete contracts that induce the utilization of a suboptimal technology for resource extraction. Further, reducing the holdup problem by shifting bargaining power to the North, is only desirable if the environmental quality increases with a better extraction technology.
F18, Resource Extraction, 330, Economics, ddc:330, Wirtschaft, Q37, Environment, Q56, Environment ; North-South Trade ; Resource Extraction, Resource Extraction, Environment, North-South Trade, North-South Trade, jel: jel:F18, jel: jel:Q37, jel: jel:Q56, ddc: ddc:330
F18, Resource Extraction, 330, Economics, ddc:330, Wirtschaft, Q37, Environment, Q56, Environment ; North-South Trade ; Resource Extraction, Resource Extraction, Environment, North-South Trade, North-South Trade, jel: jel:F18, jel: jel:Q37, jel: jel:Q56, ddc: ddc:330
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