Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10419/213812 
Is replaced by the following version: 
Title: 

Inflated Expectations and Commodity Prices: Evidence from Kazakhstan

The document was removed on behalf of the author(s)/ the editor(s).

Year of Publication: 
2020
Series/Report no.: 
GLO Discussion Paper No. 469
Publisher: 
Global Labor Organization (GLO), Essen
Abstract: 
We document that an oil price boom triggers dissatisfaction with one's income, and that this dissatisfaction is independent of the effect of the boom on real economic conditions. Unique data from Kazakhstan allows us to exploit time, sectoral and spatial variation to identify the impact of the recent oil boom on reported satisfaction with income. Oil related households – whose heads are employed in the private sector of the oil rich districts – report a decrease in satisfaction with their income during the boom compared to other households (whose heads work in other sectors and/or districts). The estimated drop in satisfaction is statistically and economically significant: a 20% increase in the price of oil decreases satisfaction with income by 1/3 of a standard deviation. We discuss different interpretations of this drop in satisfaction. The only interpretation consistent with our results is that an oil price boom creates a gap between people's expectations of the benefits from the boom and the observed economic conditions. Our results call for devoting more attention to the dynamic of satisfaction, not only during resource busts, but also during resource booms.
Subjects: 
Expectations
Labor Conflict
Oil boom
Resource Curse
Satisfaction
JEL: 
J52
N55
Q33
Q34
Document Type: 
Working Paper

Files in This Item:
The document was removed on behalf of the author(s)/ the editor(s) on: March 16, 2020


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