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Mining Booms in Africa and Local Welfare Effects: Labor Markets, Women’s Empowerment and Criminality

Storskalig gruvdrift i Afrika och lokala välfärdseffekter: arbetsmarknader, kvinnors rättigheter och kriminalitet

Abstract
The role that extractive industries can play in processes of economic development is frequently described as, at best non-existent, or at worst, persistently negative. Extractive industries, while focusing on unearthing large sub-soil wealth, are sometimes linked to adverse political and macroeconomic outcomes in developing countries. Its local economic effects have long been thought to be close to zero, due to little revenue accruing to local administrative budgets and weak linkages to local economies. The extractive industries---oil, natural gas and minerals---have been booming in Africa during the last decades. The four essays in this dissertation focus on measuring the local welfare effects of large scale mining investment, covering a broad range of outcomes. Together they give a picture of positive and negative effects on social development. The first chapter gives a broad introduction to local effects of natural resources. Chapter two analyzes the potential for local structural shifts in mining communities across 29 African countries. It finds that large scale mining investments create local structural shifts whereby men and women shift out of farming activities, and into manual labor and service sector employment. The effects are at place while the mine is still producing: upon mine closure, the newly stimulated sectors contract. Chapter three analyzes the effects of the opening of new gold mines on women's empowerment and infant health across 9 countries. The gold mines create local industrial shocks, which has strong effects on women's empowerment and gender norms. It also substantially reduces infant mortality rates. Chapter four analyzes the role of the South African mining industry in determining labor market outcomes, migration and criminality. Criminality and mining are negatively associated. Whereas mine opening can lower local crime rates, mine closures significantly increases local crime rates coinciding with a contracting local economy. Overall, the findings indicate that it might be a challenge to generate sustained long run local growth from extractive industries.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Handelshögskolan
Institution
Department of Economics ; Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistik
Disputation
Fredagen den 29 maj 2015 klockan 10.15 sal E44
Date of defence
2015-05-29
E-mail
anja.tolonen@economics.gu.se
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/2077/38780
Collections
  • Doctoral Theses / Doktorsavhandlingar Institutionen för nationalekonomi med statistik
  • Doctoral Theses from University of Gothenburg / Doktorsavhandlingar från Göteborgs universitet
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gupea_2077_38780_3.pdf (106.4Kb)
Date
2015-05-08
Author
Tolonen, Anja
Keywords
Development
Extractive Industries
Mining
Economic Growth
Women's Empowerment
Labor Markets
Africa
Criminality
Gender
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-88199-00-3
ISSN
1651-4297
Series/Report no.
Ekonomiska Studier
222
Language
eng
Metadata
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