Müəlliflər:
Ələskərova Aygün Ağasəlim qızı – Biznes və logistika kafedrası kafedrasının dosenti
Muradova Səbinə Xaliq qızı – Tətbiqi iqtisadiyyat kafedrası kafedrasının baş müəllimi
Elmi əsərin adı:
Why Oil Windfalls Do Not Equal Welfare: Regime-Dependent Long-Run Elasticities
in MENA and Azerbaijan
Scopus linki:
https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105033985943
Elmi nəşrin adı:
Economies
Elmi əsərin nəşrin rəsmi saytındakı linki:
https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7099/14/3/77
Kvartili:
Q1 (80%)
Xülasə:
Background: This study revisits whether oil revenue
windfalls translate into higher socio-economic welfare in oil-exporting
economies and explains why oil price booms often fail to generate sustained
gains in real GDP per capita. Methods: Using annual data for ten oil-exporting
countries over 1990–2024, we estimate country-specific ARDL/ECM models under a
unified specification. The dependent variable is log real GDP per capita,
explained by log real oil prices, the log share of government expenditure in
GDP, population growth, and world GDP growth, with political and devaluation
dummies where relevant. Results: Cointegration and significant error correction
terms hold for most exporters, but adjustment speeds differ sharply. Long-run
oil price elasticities are heterogeneous: strongly positive in Qatar, weak or
insignificant in several cases (including Azerbaijan), and negative in a
post-rentier pattern (UAE/Oman). Fiscal and demographic channels emerge as
systematic constraints: government expenditure shares are often negatively
associated with long-run welfare, and population growth typically reduces GDP
per capita. World GDP growth is generally positive but uneven in significance.
Conclusions: Resource use is conditional: welfare outcomes depend on fiscal regimes,
demographic pressures, and structural transformation rather than windfall size
alone.