Artículos de revistas
Oil windfalls in Brazil and their long-run social impacts
Fecha
2013-03Registro en:
Resources Policy, Gruldford, v. 38, n. 1, p. 94–101, 2013
0301-4207
Autor
Postali, Fernando Antonio Slaibe
Nishijima, Marislei
Institución
Resumen
In 1997, Brazil changed the regulatory framework of its oil and gas sector. After this change, a restrict subset of localities started to receive large amounts of oil rents. The goal of this paper is to evaluate whether such rents distributed under this law contributed to improving some social indicators relative to the national average in the eligible municipalities. We used a “difference-in-differences” measurement to compare changes in selected social indicators within affected Municipalities in the last two decades, taking the unaffected districts as control group. The Municipal data on social indicators were collected from three National Censuses, conducted in 1991, 2000 and 2010. Results show that royalties had a positive and statistically significant impact on household’s access to electric wiring, piped water and waste collection, as well as in the decrease of illiteracy rate. This means the eligible districts were able to improve some of their social indicators in the long-run