Template-Type: ReDIF-Paper 1.0 Author-Name: Mads Greaker Author-Name-First: Mads Author-Name-Last: Greaker Author-Workplace-Name: Oslo and Akershus University College - Oslo Business School Author-Name: Tom-Reiel Heggedal Author-Name-First: Tom-Reiel Author-Name-Last: Heggedal Author-Workplace-Name: BI Norwegian Business School Author-Name: Knut Einar Rosendahl Author-Name-First: Knut Author-Name-Last: Einar Rosendahl Author-Workplace-Name: Norwegian University of Life Sciences; Statistics Norway - Research Department Title: Directed Technical Change and the Resource Curse Abstract: The "resource curse" is a potential threat to all countries relying on export income from abundant natural resources. The early literature hypothesized that easily accessible natural resources would lead to lack of technological progress. In this article we instead propose that abundance of petroleum can lead to the wrong type of technological progress. We build a model of a small, open economy having specialized in export of fossil fuels. R&D in fossil fuel extraction technology competes with R&D in clean energy technologies. Moreover, technological progress is path dependent as current R&D within a technology type depends on past R&D within the same type. Finally, global climate policy may reduce the future value of fossil fuel export. We find that global climate policy may lead to a resource curse. The ripeness of the clean energy technologies is essential for the outcomes: If the clean technology level is not too far beyond the fossil fuel technology, a shift to exporting clean energy is optimal independent of global climate policy. While if the clean technology is far behind, a shift should only happen as a response to global climate policy, and the government should intervene to accelerate this shift. Classification-JEL: Creation-Date: 2022-10-10 File-URL: https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4243351 File-Format: text/html DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.4243351 Keywords: environment, directed technological change, innovation policy, resource curse Handle: RePEc:oml:wpaper:202204