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Journal Article

Resource Booms, Inequality, and Poverty: The Case of Gas in Bolivia

Authors

  • Thiele
  • R.
  • Wiebelt
  • M.
  • Lay
  • J.

Publication Date

JEL Classification

D3 D58 O17 O54 Q33

Key Words

Bolivia

Computable General Equilibrium Model

distribution

Erdgas

Microsimulation

Mikrosimulation

Natural Gas

poverty

Related Topics

Americas

This paper addresses the question of whether the Bolivian gas boom of the 1990s has bypassed large parts of the poor population, thereby leading to increasing inequalities in an already unequal society. Using a Computable General Equilibrium model that is sequentially linked to a microsimulation model, we examine the transmission channels through which the large resource inflows related to the gas boom, both initial foreign investment in the sector and the subsequent export earnings, as well as large public transfer programs affect the distribution of income. Our focus is on labour market impacts, in particular on shifts between formal and informal employment and changes in relative factor prices. Our simulation results suggest that the gas boom induces a combination of unequalising and equalising forces, which tend to offset each other. As net distributional change is limited, growth generated by the boom reduces poverty despite increasing informality.

Kiel Institute Expert

  • Prof. Dr. Rainer Thiele
    Kiel Institute Researcher

More Publications

Subject Dossiers

Research Center

  • International Development