Publication | Closed Access
Natural Resources and Small Island Economies: Mauritius and Trinidad and Tobago
59
Citations
29
References
2016
Year
EngineeringEconomic DevelopmentSustainable DevelopmentAgricultural EconomicsEconomic GrowthNatural ResourceNatural ResourcesEnvironmental Economic GeographySmall Island EconomiesAfrican DevelopmentEconomicsSmall EconomiesGeographyEconomic LiberalizationEconomic DiversificationEconomic PolicyBusinessNatural Resource EconomicsEconomic ChangeDevelopment PolicyEconomic Environment
Historically, small economies, especially resource-rich ones, underperformed on average relative to their larger counterparts. Small island economies appear still more disadvantaged due to remoteness from both markets and agglomeration economies. Yet a comparison of two small island economies with similar initial conditions other than their mineral endowment suggests that policy outweighs size, isolation and resource endowment in determining economic performance. Resource-poor Mauritius adopted an unfashionable policy of export manufacturing that systematically eliminated surplus labour, which drove economic diversification that sustained rapid GDP growth and political maturation. Like most resource-rich economies, Trinidad and Tobago pursued policies that absorbed rent too rapidly, which impeded diversification and created an illusory prosperity vulnerable to collapse.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1