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Rentier state

In current political-science and international-relations theory, a rentier state is a state which derives all or a substantial portion of its national revenues from the rent paid by foreign individuals, concerns or governments.[1]

The academic use of the term rentier states and rentier states theories (RST) became well known after the works of Hazem El Beblawi and Giacomo Luciani on the development of oil rich countries -known as petrostates- in the Persian Gulf.[2] They show that rentier states receive income without an increase in the productivity of the domestic economy or political development of the state, that is the ability to tax citizens. The unequal distribution of external income in rentier states has thus a negative effect on political liberalism and economic development. With virtually no taxes citizens are less demanding and politically engaged and the income from rents negates the need for economic development.[3]

Rentier state theories have now become a dominant frame of reference for studies of resource-dependent countries in the Gulf and wider Middle East and North African region,[4] but are also used to analyse other forms of rentierism.

Usage

The usage of rentier states is based on the concept of ‘rents’. Rents, as defined by Adam Smith, are different from wages which must be labored for. They are based on the ownership of land or resources.[5] David Ricardo defined ‘rents’ as a reward of the ownership of a resource.[6] When applied to natural resources rents can be seen as “the income derived from the gift of nature”.[7]

In a rentier state the economy relies on external rents. Economies based on internal rents cannot be defined as rentier states, as they would require a productive domestic sector. In such an economy rents would only be a part of the total income, while in rentier economies rents take up a substantial part. Rentier states thus rely on external rents and not on the productivity of the domestic sector. This creates a rentier economy which influences multiple aspects of a state's society.[8][3]

Origin

The first use of the term “rentier states” was by economists in the early twentieth century who used the term to describe European states that extended loans to non-European governments.[9] Lenin viewed rentier states (rentnerstaat), or usurer states, as a form of imperialism. He stated that a limited amount of rentier states, or creditor states, would accumulate capital through the export of capital to underdeveloped and politically dependent debtor states. According to Lenin rentier states were a “state of parasitic, decaying capitalism, and this circumstance cannot fail to influence all the socio-political conditions of the countries concerned”.[10]

The modern meaning of “rentier states” was first defined by Hossein Mahdavy[11] in his economic analysis of Iran.[8] He defined rentier states as countries that receive on a regular basis substantial amounts of external rents. External rents are in turn defined as “rentals paid by foreign individuals, concerns or governments to individual concerns or governments of a given country”.[1] According to Mahdavy the payments for the passage of ships through the Suez canal and the payments to countries in the Middle East to allow the passage of oil pipelines are forms of external rents. Also the revenues of the export of oil can be seen as external rents.[1] Mahdavy denies the idea that oil royalties are a compensation for the extraction of resources. He shows that in the Middle East governments and companies are able to make larger profits through monopolistic positions and price fixing. He also shows that within the Middle East there is no significant relation between oil export and production processes of domestic economies.[12]

The use of the term “rentier states” became well known through the works of Beblawi and Luciani.[3][4] They expanded on the more economic analysis of Mahdavy[8] by looking at the potential social and political effects of rentierism and focused on how rents were distributed and generated. According to Beblawi an essential characteristic of rentier states is the fact that only a few are engaged in the generation of rent (wealth) and a majority involved in the distribution or utilization of it. Often it is the government that is the main recipient of the external rent.[13] It is precisely these characteristics that bring forth a specific rentier mentality. Different from conventional economics is that this mentality breaks from the work-reward system. In a rentier state income or wealth is gained not from productivity or risk bearing, but rather from chance or situation.[14]

Other usage

Rentier state theories can also be applied to nations which trade on their strategic resources, such as an important military base: Egypt and Jordan have traditionally extracted strategic rent from the United States given their regional geopolitical importance.[15][16] Semi-rentier states tend to rely on migrants' remittances or international economic aid, such as Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan.[17] States hosting forcibly-displaced population group(s) may also constitute refugee rentier states, if they rely financially on external income linked to their treatment of these group(s), as in the cases of Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey in the context of the Syrian refugee crisis.[18]

Dependent upon it as a source of income, rentier states may generate rents externally by manipulating the global political and economic environment. Such manipulation may include monopolies, trading restrictions, and the solicitation of subsidies or aid in exchange for political influence or conversely the solicitation of loans in exchange for the reserve currency, e.g., the United States.

Definition

Hazem Al Beblawi suggested four characteristics of a rentier state:

  • In a rentier economy rent situations predominate.
  • The economy relies on a substantial external rent – and therefore does not require a strong domestic productive sector.
  • Only a small proportion of the working population is actually involved in the generation of the rent, whereas the majority is only involved in the distribution or utilization of it.
  • Perhaps most importantly, the state's government is the principal recipient of the external rent.[19]

Examples

The emergence of the new oil states and their increasing importance in world trade in the 1970s brought a renewed interest in thinking on rentier economies in the aforementioned disciplines of political science and international relations.[3] Examples of rentier states include oil-producing countries in the MENA region[20] including Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait, Qatar, Libya and Algeria as well as a few states in Latin America, all of whom are members of OPEC.[3][21] African states such as Nigeria, Gabon, Angola, Ghana, Uganda and South Sudan are also important oil producers with rentier economies, earning income from trading natural resources.

Rentier state theory has been one of several theories advanced to explain the predominance of authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and the apparent lack of success of democracy in the region.[22][23] While many states export resources or license their development by foreign parties, rentier states are characterized by the relative absence of revenue from domestic taxation, as their naturally occurring wealth precludes the need to extract income from their citizenry. According to Douglas Yates, the economic behavior of a rentier state "embodies a break in the work-reward causation ... [r]ewards of income and wealth for the rentier do not come as the result of work but rather are the result of chance or situation."[24] Hazem Beblawi has argued that this could create a "rentier mentality,"[3] while political scientist Fareed Zakaria has posited that such states fail to develop politically because, in the absence of taxes, citizens have less incentive to place pressure on the government to become responsive to their needs. Instead, the government essentially 'bribes' the citizenry with extensive social welfare programs, becoming an allocation or distributive state. The budget, in effect, is little more than an expenditure programme.[25]

Moreover, because control of the rent-producing resources is concentrated in the hands of the authorities, it may be used to alternately coerce or coopt their populace, while the distinction between public service and private interest becomes increasingly blurred.[26] There is, in the words of Noah Feldman in his book After Jihad, "no fiscal connection between the government and the people. The government has only to keep its people in line so that they do not overthrow it and start collecting the oil rents themselves."[27]

Outcomes

Consequently, in these resource-rich rentier states there is a challenge to developing civil society and democratization. Hence, theorists such as Beblawi conclude that the nature of rentier states provides a particular explanation for the presence of authoritarian regimes in such resource rich states.[3]

Beblawi identifies several other characteristics particularly associated with rentier oil states. For example, where the government is the largest and ultimate employer, the bureaucracy is frequently bloated and inefficient – and indeed comes to resemble a rentier class in society. Moreover, local laws often make it impossible for foreign companies to operate independently. This leads to a situation where citizenship becomes a financial asset. To do business, foreign enterprises engage a local sponsor (kafil) who allows the company to trade in his name in return for a proportion of the proceeds – another type of rent. In addition, the oil rent leads to secondary rents, usually stock market or real estate speculation.[28]

Rentier state theory foregrounds important puzzles in contemporary politics. For example, as Abulof asks, “If rents increase regime stability, especially authoritarian durability, why, then, are rentier regimes, particularly in authoritarian petro-states, more prone to civil wars?” Looking at the Middle East, “why have certain rentier states (such as Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) remained so remarkably stable, while others (such as Algeria, Bahrain, Iran, Libya and Sudan) have become—either before or during the Arab Spring—scenes of violent unrest?” Abulof points to political legitimacy as a determining factor, and argues that authoritarian rentier regimes are in fact more fragile than they seem to be.[23]

The crucial nature of oil has led to a situation where non-oil states have started to behave like rentier states. This can be seen for the region as a whole – so some states have been able to exploit location rent due to their strategic location, for example, as sites for military bases. More significantly, inter-state relations in the region have been affected as oil states try to ensure stability and tranquillity for their rent by buying allegiance from neighbouring states – in effect, sharing the oil rent. Beblawi highlights the case of Egypt whose receipt of financial aid from oil-rich neighbours declined significantly after Camp David, and money going instead to Iraq, Syria and the PLO who were considered more assertive.[29]

Criticism

Giacomo Luciani, one of the original theorists on rentier states, criticizes the dominance of rentier state theories. These theories are often solely used to analyse resource-rich countries in the Greater Middle East to explain a multitude of outcomes. Such dominance was not the intention of Luciani:[4]

Indeed, it has never been my understanding that the rentier state paradigm should be either the sole or the overwhelming tool of interpretation of the political economy of oil-producing countries. I believe that reliance on a stream of rent accruing directly to the state from the rest of the world is an important consideration, but surely not the only one.

Michael Herb criticizes the relationship between rentierism and regime type. Using a counterfactual measure which excludes the effect of oil on the economy, Herb shows that oil-rich countries fit the same patterns as other countries. He did not find a consistent support for the thesis that rentierism has a negative effect on democracy scores. Herb does however emphasize that rentierism is a distinctive condition that influences development.[30]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Mahdavy 1970, p. 428
  2. ^ Ross 2001
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Beblawi 1987
  4. ^ a b c Yamada 2020
  5. ^ Smith, Adam (1776). "Chapter XI". The Wealth of Nations.
  6. ^ Ricardo, David (1817). "Chapter III". On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation.
  7. ^ Marshall, Alfred (1920). "Book II Chapter IV". Principles of Economics.
  8. ^ a b c Mahdavy 1970
  9. ^ Ross 2001, p. 329
  10. ^ Lenin (1917). "VIII. PARASITISM AND DECAY OF CAPITALISM". Imperialism, the Highest Stage of Capitalism.
  11. ^ Ulrichsen (2018). A dictionary of politics in the Middle East. ISBN 9780191835278.
  12. ^ Mahdavy 1970, p. 429
  13. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 385
  14. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 385-386
  15. ^ Richards, Alan (1991). "The political economy of dilatory reform: Egypt in the 1980s". World Development. 19 (12): 1721–1730. doi:10.1016/0305-750X(91)90015-A.
  16. ^ Robins, Philip (2004). A History of Jordan. Cambridge University Press. pp. 29–30. ISBN 0521591171. OCLC 826289226.
  17. ^ Cummings, Sally N.; Hinnebusch, Raymond (2011-07-31). Sovereignty After Empire: Comparing the Middle East and Central Asia. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 282–304. doi:10.3366/edinburgh/9780748643042.003.0013. ISBN 9780748643042.
  18. ^ Tsourapas, Gerasimos (2019). "The Syrian Refugee Crisis and Foreign Policy Decision-Making in Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey". Journal of Global Security Studies. 4 (4): 464–481. doi:10.1093/jogss/ogz016.
  19. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 384-385
  20. ^ "POMEPS Studies 33: The Politics of Rentier States in the Gulf – Project on Middle East Political Science" (PDF). pomeps.org. Retrieved 2019-02-02. .
  21. ^ Anderson, Lisa (1987). "The State in the Middle East and North Africa". Comparative Politics. 20 (1): 1–18. doi:10.2307/421917. JSTOR 421917.
  22. ^ Smith, Benjamin (2004). "Oil Wealth and Regime Survival in the Developing World, 1960-1999". American Journal of Political Science. 48 (2): 232–246. doi:10.1111/j.0092-5853.2004.00067.x. JSTOR 1519880.
  23. ^ a b Abulof, Uriel (2017). "'Can't buy me legitimacy': The elusive stability of Mideast rentier regimes". Journal of International Relations and Development. 20: 55–79. doi:10.1057/jird.2014.32. S2CID 147600985.
  24. ^ . www.semp.us. Archived from the original on October 29, 2005.
  25. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 387
  26. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 388
  27. ^ Feldman, N. (2003). After Jihad: America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracy, New York, Farrar, Straus and Giroux, p. 139.
  28. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 389
  29. ^ Beblawi 1987, p. 393
  30. ^ Herb, Michael (1 April 2005). "No Representation without Taxation? Rents, Development, and Democracy". Comparative Politics. 37 (3): 297–316. doi:10.2307/20072891. JSTOR 20072891.
Bibliography
  • Beblawi, Hazem (1987). "The Rentier State in the Arab World". Arab Studies Quarterly. 9 (4): 383–398. ISSN 0271-3519. JSTOR 41857943.
  • Mahdavy, Hossein (1970). "Patterns and Problems of Economic Development in Rentier States : the Case of Iran". In M. A. Cook (ed.). Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East (1 ed.). London: Routledge. pp. 428–467.
  • Neal, Mark, ed. (2019). "rentier state". A Dictionary of Business and Management in the Middle East and North Africa. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191843266.
  • Ulrichsen, Kristian Coates, ed. (2018). "rentier state theory". A Dictionary of Politics in the Middle East. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780191835278.
  • Ross, Michael L. (2001). "Does Oil Hinder Democracy?". World Politics. 53 (3): 325–361. doi:10.1353/wp.2001.0011. ISSN 1086-3338. S2CID 18404.
  • Yamada, Makio; Hertog, Steffen (2020). "Introduction: revisiting rentierism—with a short note by Giacomo Luciani". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 47 (1): 1–5. doi:10.1080/13530194.2020.1714267. ISSN 1353-0194.

Further reading

  • Beblawi, Hazem; Luciani, Giacomo (1987). The Rentier State. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-68486-4.
  • "Revisiting Rentierism: The Changing Political Economy of Resource-Dependent States in the Gulf and Arabian Peninsula". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 47 (1). 2020.

External links

  • State Formation Processes in Rentier States: The Middle Eastern Case
  • Michael Dauderstädt:
  • Ismail Küpeli: (Keine) Demokratie im Rentierstaat Syrien? Munich 2008, ISBN 978-3-640-11110-7 (ebook about the rentier state Syria)

rentier, state, this, article, about, rentier, capitalism, other, uses, rentier, current, political, science, international, relations, theory, rentier, state, state, which, derives, substantial, portion, national, revenues, from, rent, paid, foreign, individu. This article is about Rentier capitalism For other uses see Rentier In current political science and international relations theory a rentier state is a state which derives all or a substantial portion of its national revenues from the rent paid by foreign individuals concerns or governments 1 The academic use of the term rentier states and rentier states theories RST became well known after the works of Hazem El Beblawi and Giacomo Luciani on the development of oil rich countries known as petrostates in the Persian Gulf 2 They show that rentier states receive income without an increase in the productivity of the domestic economy or political development of the state that is the ability to tax citizens The unequal distribution of external income in rentier states has thus a negative effect on political liberalism and economic development With virtually no taxes citizens are less demanding and politically engaged and the income from rents negates the need for economic development 3 Rentier state theories have now become a dominant frame of reference for studies of resource dependent countries in the Gulf and wider Middle East and North African region 4 but are also used to analyse other forms of rentierism Contents 1 Usage 1 1 Origin 1 2 Other usage 2 Definition 3 Examples 4 Outcomes 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksUsage EditThe usage of rentier states is based on the concept of rents Rents as defined by Adam Smith are different from wages which must be labored for They are based on the ownership of land or resources 5 David Ricardo defined rents as a reward of the ownership of a resource 6 When applied to natural resources rents can be seen as the income derived from the gift of nature 7 In a rentier state the economy relies on external rents Economies based on internal rents cannot be defined as rentier states as they would require a productive domestic sector In such an economy rents would only be a part of the total income while in rentier economies rents take up a substantial part Rentier states thus rely on external rents and not on the productivity of the domestic sector This creates a rentier economy which influences multiple aspects of a state s society 8 3 Origin Edit The first use of the term rentier states was by economists in the early twentieth century who used the term to describe European states that extended loans to non European governments 9 Lenin viewed rentier states rentnerstaat or usurer states as a form of imperialism He stated that a limited amount of rentier states or creditor states would accumulate capital through the export of capital to underdeveloped and politically dependent debtor states According to Lenin rentier states were a state of parasitic decaying capitalism and this circumstance cannot fail to influence all the socio political conditions of the countries concerned 10 The modern meaning of rentier states was first defined by Hossein Mahdavy 11 in his economic analysis of Iran 8 He defined rentier states as countries that receive on a regular basis substantial amounts of external rents External rents are in turn defined as rentals paid by foreign individuals concerns or governments to individual concerns or governments of a given country 1 According to Mahdavy the payments for the passage of ships through the Suez canal and the payments to countries in the Middle East to allow the passage of oil pipelines are forms of external rents Also the revenues of the export of oil can be seen as external rents 1 Mahdavy denies the idea that oil royalties are a compensation for the extraction of resources He shows that in the Middle East governments and companies are able to make larger profits through monopolistic positions and price fixing He also shows that within the Middle East there is no significant relation between oil export and production processes of domestic economies 12 The use of the term rentier states became well known through the works of Beblawi and Luciani 3 4 They expanded on the more economic analysis of Mahdavy 8 by looking at the potential social and political effects of rentierism and focused on how rents were distributed and generated According to Beblawi an essential characteristic of rentier states is the fact that only a few are engaged in the generation of rent wealth and a majority involved in the distribution or utilization of it Often it is the government that is the main recipient of the external rent 13 It is precisely these characteristics that bring forth a specific rentier mentality Different from conventional economics is that this mentality breaks from the work reward system In a rentier state income or wealth is gained not from productivity or risk bearing but rather from chance or situation 14 Other usage Edit Rentier state theories can also be applied to nations which trade on their strategic resources such as an important military base Egypt and Jordan have traditionally extracted strategic rent from the United States given their regional geopolitical importance 15 16 Semi rentier states tend to rely on migrants remittances or international economic aid such as Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan 17 States hosting forcibly displaced population group s may also constitute refugee rentier states if they rely financially on external income linked to their treatment of these group s as in the cases of Jordan Lebanon and Turkey in the context of the Syrian refugee crisis 18 Dependent upon it as a source of income rentier states may generate rents externally by manipulating the global political and economic environment Such manipulation may include monopolies trading restrictions and the solicitation of subsidies or aid in exchange for political influence or conversely the solicitation of loans in exchange for the reserve currency e g the United States Definition EditHazem Al Beblawi suggested four characteristics of a rentier state In a rentier economy rent situations predominate The economy relies on a substantial external rent and therefore does not require a strong domestic productive sector Only a small proportion of the working population is actually involved in the generation of the rent whereas the majority is only involved in the distribution or utilization of it Perhaps most importantly the state s government is the principal recipient of the external rent 19 Examples EditThe emergence of the new oil states and their increasing importance in world trade in the 1970s brought a renewed interest in thinking on rentier economies in the aforementioned disciplines of political science and international relations 3 Examples of rentier states include oil producing countries in the MENA region 20 including Saudi Arabia United Arab Emirates Iraq Iran Kuwait Qatar Libya and Algeria as well as a few states in Latin America all of whom are members of OPEC 3 21 African states such as Nigeria Gabon Angola Ghana Uganda and South Sudan are also important oil producers with rentier economies earning income from trading natural resources Rentier state theory has been one of several theories advanced to explain the predominance of authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and the apparent lack of success of democracy in the region 22 23 While many states export resources or license their development by foreign parties rentier states are characterized by the relative absence of revenue from domestic taxation as their naturally occurring wealth precludes the need to extract income from their citizenry According to Douglas Yates the economic behavior of a rentier state embodies a break in the work reward causation r ewards of income and wealth for the rentier do not come as the result of work but rather are the result of chance or situation 24 Hazem Beblawi has argued that this could create a rentier mentality 3 while political scientist Fareed Zakaria has posited that such states fail to develop politically because in the absence of taxes citizens have less incentive to place pressure on the government to become responsive to their needs Instead the government essentially bribes the citizenry with extensive social welfare programs becoming an allocation or distributive state The budget in effect is little more than an expenditure programme 25 Moreover because control of the rent producing resources is concentrated in the hands of the authorities it may be used to alternately coerce or coopt their populace while the distinction between public service and private interest becomes increasingly blurred 26 There is in the words of Noah Feldman in his book After Jihad no fiscal connection between the government and the people The government has only to keep its people in line so that they do not overthrow it and start collecting the oil rents themselves 27 Outcomes EditConsequently in these resource rich rentier states there is a challenge to developing civil society and democratization Hence theorists such as Beblawi conclude that the nature of rentier states provides a particular explanation for the presence of authoritarian regimes in such resource rich states 3 Beblawi identifies several other characteristics particularly associated with rentier oil states For example where the government is the largest and ultimate employer the bureaucracy is frequently bloated and inefficient and indeed comes to resemble a rentier class in society Moreover local laws often make it impossible for foreign companies to operate independently This leads to a situation where citizenship becomes a financial asset To do business foreign enterprises engage a local sponsor kafil who allows the company to trade in his name in return for a proportion of the proceeds another type of rent In addition the oil rent leads to secondary rents usually stock market or real estate speculation 28 Rentier state theory foregrounds important puzzles in contemporary politics For example as Abulof asks If rents increase regime stability especially authoritarian durability why then are rentier regimes particularly in authoritarian petro states more prone to civil wars Looking at the Middle East why have certain rentier states such as Kuwait Oman Qatar the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates remained so remarkably stable while others such as Algeria Bahrain Iran Libya and Sudan have become either before or during the Arab Spring scenes of violent unrest Abulof points to political legitimacy as a determining factor and argues that authoritarian rentier regimes are in fact more fragile than they seem to be 23 The crucial nature of oil has led to a situation where non oil states have started to behave like rentier states This can be seen for the region as a whole so some states have been able to exploit location rent due to their strategic location for example as sites for military bases More significantly inter state relations in the region have been affected as oil states try to ensure stability and tranquillity for their rent by buying allegiance from neighbouring states in effect sharing the oil rent Beblawi highlights the case of Egypt whose receipt of financial aid from oil rich neighbours declined significantly after Camp David and money going instead to Iraq Syria and the PLO who were considered more assertive 29 Criticism EditGiacomo Luciani one of the original theorists on rentier states criticizes the dominance of rentier state theories These theories are often solely used to analyse resource rich countries in the Greater Middle East to explain a multitude of outcomes Such dominance was not the intention of Luciani 4 Indeed it has never been my understanding that the rentier state paradigm should be either the sole or the overwhelming tool of interpretation of the political economy of oil producing countries I believe that reliance on a stream of rent accruing directly to the state from the rest of the world is an important consideration but surely not the only one Michael Herb criticizes the relationship between rentierism and regime type Using a counterfactual measure which excludes the effect of oil on the economy Herb shows that oil rich countries fit the same patterns as other countries He did not find a consistent support for the thesis that rentierism has a negative effect on democracy scores Herb does however emphasize that rentierism is a distinctive condition that influences development 30 See also EditPetrostate Resource curse Rent seeking Rentier capitalism KleptocracyReferences Edit a b c Mahdavy 1970 p 428 Ross 2001 a b c d e f g Beblawi 1987 a b c Yamada 2020 Smith Adam 1776 Chapter XI The Wealth of Nations Ricardo David 1817 Chapter III On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation Marshall Alfred 1920 Book II Chapter IV Principles of Economics a b c Mahdavy 1970 Ross 2001 p 329 Lenin 1917 VIII PARASITISM AND DECAY OF CAPITALISM Imperialism the Highest Stage of Capitalism Ulrichsen 2018 A dictionary of politics in the Middle East ISBN 9780191835278 Mahdavy 1970 p 429 Beblawi 1987 p 385 Beblawi 1987 p 385 386 Richards Alan 1991 The political economy of dilatory reform Egypt in the 1980s World Development 19 12 1721 1730 doi 10 1016 0305 750X 91 90015 A Robins Philip 2004 A History of Jordan Cambridge University Press pp 29 30 ISBN 0521591171 OCLC 826289226 Cummings Sally N Hinnebusch Raymond 2011 07 31 Sovereignty After Empire Comparing the Middle East and Central Asia Edinburgh University Press pp 282 304 doi 10 3366 edinburgh 9780748643042 003 0013 ISBN 9780748643042 Tsourapas Gerasimos 2019 The Syrian Refugee Crisis and Foreign Policy Decision Making in Jordan Lebanon and Turkey Journal of Global Security Studies 4 4 464 481 doi 10 1093 jogss ogz016 Beblawi 1987 p 384 385 POMEPS Studies 33 The Politics of Rentier States in the Gulf Project on Middle East Political Science PDF pomeps org Retrieved 2019 02 02 Abstract Anderson Lisa 1987 The State in the Middle East and North Africa Comparative Politics 20 1 1 18 doi 10 2307 421917 JSTOR 421917 Smith Benjamin 2004 Oil Wealth and Regime Survival in the Developing World 1960 1999 American Journal of Political Science 48 2 232 246 doi 10 1111 j 0092 5853 2004 00067 x JSTOR 1519880 a b Abulof Uriel 2017 Can t buy me legitimacy The elusive stability of Mideast rentier regimes Journal of International Relations and Development 20 55 79 doi 10 1057 jird 2014 32 S2CID 147600985 SEMP Evidence based disaster management www semp us Archived from the original on October 29 2005 Beblawi 1987 p 387 Beblawi 1987 p 388 Feldman N 2003 After Jihad America and the Struggle for Islamic Democracy New York Farrar Straus and Giroux p 139 Beblawi 1987 p 389 Beblawi 1987 p 393 Herb Michael 1 April 2005 No Representation without Taxation Rents Development and Democracy Comparative Politics 37 3 297 316 doi 10 2307 20072891 JSTOR 20072891 BibliographyBeblawi Hazem 1987 The Rentier State in the Arab World Arab Studies Quarterly 9 4 383 398 ISSN 0271 3519 JSTOR 41857943 Mahdavy Hossein 1970 Patterns and Problems of Economic Development in Rentier States the Case of Iran In M A Cook ed Studies in the Economic History of the Middle East 1 ed London Routledge pp 428 467 Neal Mark ed 2019 rentier state A Dictionary of Business and Management in the Middle East and North Africa Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191843266 Ulrichsen Kristian Coates ed 2018 rentier state theory A Dictionary of Politics in the Middle East Oxford University Press ISBN 9780191835278 Ross Michael L 2001 Does Oil Hinder Democracy World Politics 53 3 325 361 doi 10 1353 wp 2001 0011 ISSN 1086 3338 S2CID 18404 Yamada Makio Hertog Steffen 2020 Introduction revisiting rentierism with a short note by Giacomo Luciani British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 47 1 1 5 doi 10 1080 13530194 2020 1714267 ISSN 1353 0194 Further reading EditBeblawi Hazem Luciani Giacomo 1987 The Rentier State Routledge ISBN 978 1 315 68486 4 Revisiting Rentierism The Changing Political Economy of Resource Dependent States in the Gulf and Arabian Peninsula British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 47 1 2020 External links Edit What is a Rentier State State Formation Processes in Rentier States The Middle Eastern Case The Rentier State Model and Central Asian Studies The Turkmen Case Michael Dauderstadt Dead Ends of Transition Rentier Economies and Protectorates Ismail Kupeli Keine Demokratie im Rentierstaat Syrien Munich 2008 ISBN 978 3 640 11110 7 ebook about the rentier state Syria Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Rentier state amp oldid 1134235409, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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