Type | Working Paper |
Title | Timor-Leste: The Political Economy of a Rentier State |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2013 |
URL | http://www.laohamutuk.org/econ/model/NevesPoliticalRentierTLSA2013.pdf |
Abstract | Since 2005, Timor-Leste’s state receives multi-billion dollars from Petroleum Revenues. These revenues, on one side, enable the state to expand its programs by financing milliondollar infrastructure projects, social services, subsidizing veterans and elderly, and expand the state’s bureaucracy during the last five years. On the other side, it turns Timor-Leste into a Rentier State, confirmed by various quantitative data and qualitative analyses. The argument that Timor-Leste is a Rentier State based on various characteristics, namely independence of the state vis-a-vis domestic economy, composition of GDP, proportion of public expenditure as domestic economy, employment structure, and Dutch Disease. Due to this, it shapes the economic structure in its own unique way, and the characteristics in which the state and society interacts. This paper discusses some of the current economic policies and some of its impacts. Furthermore, this paper intends to provide some theoretical as well as conceptual framework to help understand the current political economy of Timor-Leste, and the challenges that it faces as a petro-dependent country. |
» | Timor-Leste - Household Income and Expenditure Survey 2011 |