Title
Fading local effects: Boom and bust evidence from a Peruvian gold mine
Date Issued
01 April 2020
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Publisher(s)
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
The local effects of mining might simply come and go with mine production. In this paper we revisit Aragón and Rud's (2013) study of the Yanacocha mine, frequently cited to account for local economic effects and backward linkages, but we offer a more nuanced interpretation: First, effects fade with the mine exhaustion; and second, impacts are the result of consumption boom-and-bust dynamics. While we find it more conceptually accurate to reserve the concept of backward linkages for effects of a productive nature, our evidence reveals that unskilled services is the one sector that benefits, in contrast to manufactures and skilled services. We stress that impact evaluations of mines are contingent to time and place, and contend that exploring the extent to which multipliers generate spillovers is central. The short-run effects of a mine might in fact give little indication of how to tell or make a blessing from a curse.
Start page
182
End page
203
Volume
25
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Minería, Procesamiento de minerales Mineralogía
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-85074144950
Source
Environment and Development Economics
ISSN of the container
1355770X
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus