Dutch Disease

In economics, the Dutch disease is the apparent causal relationship between the increase in the economic development of a specific sector (for example natural resources) and a decline in other sectors (like the manufacturing sector or agriculture). The presumed mechanism is that as revenues increase in the growing sector (or inflows of foreign aid), the given nation's currency becomes stronger (appreciates) compared to currencies of other nations (manifest in an exchange rate). This results in the nation's other exports becoming more expensive for other countries to buy, and imports becoming cheaper, making those sectors less competitive. While it most often …

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Publications

Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy · 1 May 2023 English

A majority of interviewees believe that SK farmers prefer to grow lentils because of the drier climate, the profitability of the crop, the lack of alternatives in SK compared to …

in the overall province economics (aka the Dutch disease), as well as on the existence of a strong and


C.D. Howe Institute · 4 August 2022 English

The short-term economic costs of the invasion include not only the direct war damage in Ukraine and the immediate consequences of the economic sanctions and counter-sanctions on current economic output …

to Russia’s terms of trade from it faces a “Dutch Disease” problem as commodity the effect of sanctions transponders to avoid (for a discussion of Dutch Disease in the context identification as they sell into org/2022/06/28/1108119523/ __________. 2014. “Diagnosing Dutch Disease,” death-toll-rises-from-russian-strike-on-shopping-


Ontario 360 · 30 July 2022 English

the regulation and taxation of alcohol, Ontario could be said to have the tax equivalent of “Dutch disease.” Let’s call it the “Calvinist disease.”2 Calvinist in that it celebrated the willing embrace

Introduction The Economist magazine coined the term “Dutch Disease” in 1977 to describe the unintended consequences could be said to have the tax equivalent of “Dutch disease.” Let’s call it the “Calvinist disease.”2 Calvinist


CGPA: Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association · 3 May 2022 English

At the height of the crisis, the closure of several sectors of the economy resulted in the loss of nearly 3 million jobs in Price pressures have been even more …

confidentiality. For comparison purposes, the US is Dutch disease), particularly on the manufacturing sector,


CGPA: Canadian Generic Pharmaceutical Association · 13 April 2022 English

The European Union and the United the context of the 2021-2022 federal budget, the risks of States have recorded inflation rates of 5.3% and 7% over-stimulating the economy. [...] In …

confidentiality. For comparison purposes, the US is Dutch disease), particularly on the manufacturing sector,


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 15 February 2022 English

Responsibility is political. As the international community has called for more responsible environmental, social, and governance performance, the politics of commodities has become more fraught. Commodity Politics cuts through the …

their currencies. This condition can yield the Dutch Disease, a trap that locks resource exporters into


Centre de Recherche en économie de l'Environnement, de l'Agroalimentaire, des Transports et de l'Énergie · 26 January 2022 French

Je vous souhaite une bonne lecture de ce rapport 2019-2020 du CREATE qui traduit l’engagement de ses membres! Lota Dabio Tamini Directeur du CREATE 1 Historique du Centre Le Centre …

Oil Price, Provincial Government Revenues and Dutch Disease » 31 octobre 2019 Pavillon J.-A.-DeSève, salle


Fraser Institute · 29 September 2021 English

Canada displays many of the same symptoms of business malaise evident in European nations. Real GDP growth over the past decade was the slowest since the 1930s, productivity has stalled, …

exchange rate was widely assumed to be fostering a Dutch-disease destruction of Canadian manufacturers. Cross


MQUP: McGill-Queen's University Press · 9 June 2021 English

Robert (Bob) Andrew Young (1950–2017) was Canada Research Chair in Multilevel Governance at the University of Western Ontario and one of Canada's most distinguished political scientists. In Across Boundaries Young's …

context of what he calls Canada’s version of the “Dutch Disease”: that high oil prices drive up our exchange significantly temper the operations of the Dutch Disease and its negative impact on manufacturing, but relationship has come to be referred to as the “Dutch Disease,” so named because the discovery and export manufacturing. The amplitude of Canada’s version of the Dutch-Disease-driven exchange rate swings is so wide, and implications of this approach. Energy Royalties, the Dutch Disease, and Provincial Sovereign Wealth Funds Canada’s


Ontario 360 · 3 June 2021 English

We also recognize the support of the University of Toronto and the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy as the Ontario 360 project’s intellectual and administrative home. [...] …

employment continues to be important, a China Shock, Dutch Disease, and a especially for local economies.13 global


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