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The Extractive Industries Sector : : Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers. / / Halland, Havard
The Extractive Industries Sector : : Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers. / / Halland, Havard
Autore Halland Havard
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, DC : , : World Bank, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (148 pages)
Disciplina 338.2
Soggetto topico Mineral industries - Social aspects
Mineral industries - Environmental aspects
Mineral industries - Environmental aspects - Developing countries
Sustainable development - Developing countries
Economic development projects - Developing countries - Evaluation
ISBN 1-4648-0493-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Record Nr. UNINA-9910797527703321
Halland Havard  
Washington, DC : , : World Bank, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
The Extractive Industries Sector : : Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers. / / Halland, Havard
The Extractive Industries Sector : : Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers. / / Halland, Havard
Autore Halland Havard
Edizione [1st ed.]
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, DC : , : World Bank, , 2015
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (148 pages)
Disciplina 338.2
Soggetto topico Mineral industries - Social aspects
Mineral industries - Environmental aspects
Mineral industries - Environmental aspects - Developing countries
Sustainable development - Developing countries
Economic development projects - Developing countries - Evaluation
ISBN 1-4648-0493-1
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- About the Authors -- Abbreviations -- Overview -- What Should We Know about the Extractive Industries Sector? -- Notes -- Organization of this Volume -- Chapter 1 Defining Sector Policy Objectives -- The Extractive Industries Value Chain -- Improving Revenue Mobilization -- Generating Extractive-Based Economic and Social Development -- Note -- Chapter 2 The Economics of the Extractive Industries Sector -- Accounting for Physical Stocks: Resources, Reserves, and the Economic Interpretation of Ore -- Theory of Rents and Valuation of Subsoil Assets -- Structure of Energy and Mineral Markets -- Notes -- Chapter 3 Institutional Framework -- Mandates and Coordination -- Role of the Sector Ministry -- Roles of the Ministry of Finance and Revenue-Collecting Agencies -- Role of the National Resource Company -- Roles of Other Ministries and Government Agencies -- Note -- Chapter 4 Investment and Production Cycles -- Characteristics of Extractive Industry Investments -- The Mining Cycle -- The Oil and Gas Cycle -- Chapter 5 Extractive Industries Policy -- Policy and Regulatory Frameworks -- Sector Financing, Ownership, and Liabilities -- Mineral Legislation, Regulation, and Contracting Regimes -- Establishing and Maintaining a Geodata Information Base -- Mineral Rights Cadastre -- Overview of Extractive Industries Tax and Royalty Regimes -- Enhancing Competitiveness and Productivity -- Note -- Chapter 6 Monitoring and Enforcing Contracts: Legal Obligations and Institutional Responsibilities -- Legal and Contractual Regimes -- Building Transparency and Accountability in Contract and Revenue Management -- Monitoring and Enforcing Fiscal Regimes for the Extractive Sector -- Environmental Safeguards: Financial Sureties for Decommissioning -- Social Safeguards: Community Foundations, Trusts, and Funds.
Chapter 7 Public Infrastructure and Investment -- From Subsoil Assets to Above-Ground Investment -- Infrastructure Investment -- Chapter 8 Economic Diversification and Local Content Development -- Developing Linkages -- Appendix A Resource Classification Frameworks -- The Four Classification Codes -- Committee for Mineral Reserves International Reporting Standards (CRIRSCO) -- The Society of Petroleum Engineers-Petroleum Resources Management System (SPE-PRMS) -- United Nations Framework Classification for Fossil Energy and Mineral Reserves and Resources 2009 -- System of Environmental-Economic Accounting 2012 -- Appendix B Types of Economic Rents -- Hotelling Rents, or User Costs -- Ricardian Rents -- Quasi-Rents -- Appendix C Impact of Income Changes on Commodity Demand -- How Does Demand for Commodities Adjust? -- Notes -- Appendix D Effective Resource Contract Enforcement: A Checklist of Guidelines -- Why Use a Checklist? -- Resource Revenue Collection -- Resource Revenue Projections and Macrofiscal Planning -- Management of Expenditure and Contingent Liabilities -- References -- Boxes -- 3.1 Insufficient Institutional Coordination and Its Impact: The Case of Ghana -- 5.1 Mineral Policy -- 5.2 Modes of State Participation -- 5.3 Mining Law -- 5.4 Mining Regulations -- 5.5 Mining Contracts and Licenses -- 6.1 Establishing the Extractive Industries Tax Base: Generating Production Data -- 6.2 South Africa: Large State Liabilities Resulting from Inadequate Decommissioning -- 6.3 Financing for Community Benefit Sharing: Examples -- 6.4 Developing Local Investment Capacity in Peru -- 7.1 Effective Public Investment Management -- 7.2 A Discussion of Resource-Financed Infrastructure -- 8.1 The Diversification of Norway's Oil and Gas Value Chain -- 8.2 International Experience in Promoting Downstream Mineral Processing.
8.3 Institutional Infrastructure for Nonresource Diversification in Chile -- A.1 CRIRSCO Classification System Definitions -- A.2 SPE-PRMS Classification Definitions -- B.1 Rents Outlined in David Ricardo's 1821 Treatise On the Principles of Political Economy and Taxation -- C.1 Secular Growth and Structural Change in China: An Application of the Intensity-of-Use Approach -- Figures -- 1.1 The Extractive Industries Value Chain: A Framework for Governance -- 2.1 Graphical Representation of How a Change in Royalty Would Affect the Cutoff Grade and Economic Feasibility of Zambia's Lumwana-Chimiwungo Resource -- 2.2 Cost Curve of Copper Mine Production, Selected Projects, Zambia -- 2.3 Conceptual Depiction of Ricardian and Hotelling Rents -- 2.4 Three-Month Copper Prices Compared with Three-Month Aluminum Prices, 1990-2012 -- 2.5 Illustrative Demand Curves in the Immediate, Short, Long, and Very Long Run -- 2.6 Illustrative Supply Curves in the Immediate, Short, Long, and Very Long Run -- 2.7 World Gold Exploration Expenditures versus Gold Prices, 1975-2012 -- 3.1 Proposed Model for the Organization of Afghanistan's Ministry of Mines -- 4.1 The Four Stages of the Mining Cycle -- 5.1 Sharing Costs of Geodata between the Private and Public Sectors -- 5.2 Stylized Representation of Volume-, Value-, and Profit-Based Taxes -- 5.3 Production-Sharing Agreements -- 6.1 Managing Financial Sureties upon Site Closure: Four Administrative Steps -- 7.1 Revenue Leakages -- 7.2 Stages in Public Investment Management -- 8.1 Connecting Extractive Industries with the Larger Economy: Five Types of Linkages -- B.8.2.1 Global Copper Production, Refining, and Consumption Trends, 2013 -- A.1 CRIRSCO Framework for Mineral Reserves and Resource Classification -- A.2 SPE-PRMS Hydrocarbon Resources Classification Framework -- A.3 UNFC-2009 System: Key Principles.
C.1 The "Kuznets Facts," Illustrated by the Share of U.S. Employment in Agriculture, Manufacturing, and Services, 1800-2000 -- C.1.1 Indexed Intensity of Use in China for Various Commodities -- C.1.2 Steel Intensity and Gross Domestic Product in Selected Countries, 1900-2011 -- Tables -- 2.1 Preliminary Assessment of How Various Royalty Levels Would Affect the Cutoff Grade and Economic Feasibility of Zambia's Lumwana-Chimiwungo Resource -- 2.2 Summary of Constraints to Demand and Supply across Time Periods -- 2.3 Selected Copper Supply Disruptions in 2014 -- 4.1 The Mining Cycle -- 4.2 Feasibility Studies: An Overview -- 5.1 Separation of Key Functions in the Extractive Sector -- 5.2 The Components of an Extractive Industries Sector Program -- 5.3 Types and Characteristics of Mineral Rights Awards -- 6.1 Key Contractual Obligations: Enforcement and Budgetary Impacts -- 6.2 Evaluation of Commonly Used Financial Surety Instruments -- A.1 SEEA-2012 Classes and Relevant UNFC-2009 Categories -- Back Cover.
Record Nr. UNINA-9910816967903321
Halland Havard  
Washington, DC : , : World Bank, , 2015
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Resource financed infrastructure : a discussion on a new form of infrastructure financing / / Havard Halland, John Beardsworth, Bryan Land, and James Schmidt ; with comments by Paul Collier, Alan Gelb, Justin Yifu Lin and Yan Wang, Clare Short, Louis Wells
Resource financed infrastructure : a discussion on a new form of infrastructure financing / / Havard Halland, John Beardsworth, Bryan Land, and James Schmidt ; with comments by Paul Collier, Alan Gelb, Justin Yifu Lin and Yan Wang, Clare Short, Louis Wells
Autore Halland Havard
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, DC : , : International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, , 2014
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xv, 89 pages) : illustrations (some color) ; ; 26 cm
Disciplina 332.042
Collana World Bank Studies
Soggetto topico Infrastructure (Economics)
ISBN 1-4648-0240-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; About the Commentators; Abbreviations; Part 1 Key Perspectives; Overview; Scope and Focus; RFI Essentials; RFI Debated; Criticism and Risks; Part 2 Resource Financed Infrastructure: Origins and Issues; Chapter 1 Introduction; Boxes; Box 1.1 In a Word; Chapter 2 The Origins of the Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Traditional Resource Development Model; Box 2.1 The Investor; Figures; Figure 2.1 Example of a Traditional Resource Development Model; Box 2.2 Dual Role Risks; Tables; Table 2.1 Traditional Resource Development Model
Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model Figure 2.2 Example of a Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model; Project Finance Model; Table 2.2 Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model; Figure 2.3 Example of a Project Finance Model; Public-Private Partnership Model; Table 2.3 Project Finance Model; Figure 2.4 Example of a Public-Private Partnership Model; Table 2.4 Public-Private Partnership Model; Mind the Gaps; Chapter 3 Resource. Financed. Infrastructure.; Box 3.1 Three Government Counterparties for One Project?
Figure 3.1 Example of a Resource Financed Infrastructure Model with Government Ownership of the Infrastructure Component The Resource Financed Infrastructure Model: Similar to Its Parents, But a Unique Child; Figure 3.2 Example of a Resource Financed Infrastructure Model with a PPP Coinvestor in the Infrastructure Component; Table 3.1 Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Chapter 4 Early Experience with Resource Financed Infrastructure Transactions; Box 4.1 A Model Timeline?; Chapter 5 Financial Issues; Unbundling the Main Financing Characteristics; Box 5.1 Revenue Anticipation Financing
Valuation of Resource Financed Infrastructure Exchanges Box 5.2 Pay the Interest?; Relationship to the Fiscal Regime; Box 5.3 The Project Implementation Unit; Box 5.4 Is Confidentiality Habit Forming?; Infrastructure Pricing; The Role of Concessional Finance; Environmental and Social Obligations; Chapter 6 Structural Issues; Key Contractual Arrangements in the Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Tendering; Structure of Contract Liabilities and Settlement of Disputes, Current Practices, Main Issues, and Options; Sharing of Risk; Government Ownership/Joint Ventures
Chapter 7 Operational Issues Quality of the Infrastructure/Third-Party Supervision; Operation and Maintenance of Infrastructure; Specification of Technical Standards and Monitoring Requirements; Box 7.1 Choosing Standards; Chapter 8 Conclusions; Part 3 Comments; Comments by Paul Collier; Comments by Alan Gelb; Comments by Justin Yifu Lin* and Yan Wang**; Comments by Clare Short; Box A.1 The EITI Standard's Treatment of Resource Financed Infrastructure; Comments by Louis T. Wells; Back Cover
Record Nr. UNINA-9910791029403321
Halland Havard  
Washington, DC : , : International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, , 2014
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui
Resource financed infrastructure : a discussion on a new form of infrastructure financing / / Havard Halland, John Beardsworth, Bryan Land, and James Schmidt ; with comments by Paul Collier, Alan Gelb, Justin Yifu Lin and Yan Wang, Clare Short, Louis Wells
Resource financed infrastructure : a discussion on a new form of infrastructure financing / / Havard Halland, John Beardsworth, Bryan Land, and James Schmidt ; with comments by Paul Collier, Alan Gelb, Justin Yifu Lin and Yan Wang, Clare Short, Louis Wells
Autore Halland Havard
Pubbl/distr/stampa Washington, DC : , : International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, , 2014
Descrizione fisica 1 online resource (xv, 89 pages) : illustrations (some color) ; ; 26 cm
Disciplina 332.042
Collana World Bank Studies
Soggetto topico Infrastructure (Economics)
ISBN 1-4648-0240-8
Formato Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione eng
Nota di contenuto Front Cover; Contents; Acknowledgments; About the Authors; About the Commentators; Abbreviations; Part 1 Key Perspectives; Overview; Scope and Focus; RFI Essentials; RFI Debated; Criticism and Risks; Part 2 Resource Financed Infrastructure: Origins and Issues; Chapter 1 Introduction; Boxes; Box 1.1 In a Word; Chapter 2 The Origins of the Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Traditional Resource Development Model; Box 2.1 The Investor; Figures; Figure 2.1 Example of a Traditional Resource Development Model; Box 2.2 Dual Role Risks; Tables; Table 2.1 Traditional Resource Development Model
Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model Figure 2.2 Example of a Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model; Project Finance Model; Table 2.2 Traditional Government Infrastructure Purchasing Model; Figure 2.3 Example of a Project Finance Model; Public-Private Partnership Model; Table 2.3 Project Finance Model; Figure 2.4 Example of a Public-Private Partnership Model; Table 2.4 Public-Private Partnership Model; Mind the Gaps; Chapter 3 Resource. Financed. Infrastructure.; Box 3.1 Three Government Counterparties for One Project?
Figure 3.1 Example of a Resource Financed Infrastructure Model with Government Ownership of the Infrastructure Component The Resource Financed Infrastructure Model: Similar to Its Parents, But a Unique Child; Figure 3.2 Example of a Resource Financed Infrastructure Model with a PPP Coinvestor in the Infrastructure Component; Table 3.1 Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Chapter 4 Early Experience with Resource Financed Infrastructure Transactions; Box 4.1 A Model Timeline?; Chapter 5 Financial Issues; Unbundling the Main Financing Characteristics; Box 5.1 Revenue Anticipation Financing
Valuation of Resource Financed Infrastructure Exchanges Box 5.2 Pay the Interest?; Relationship to the Fiscal Regime; Box 5.3 The Project Implementation Unit; Box 5.4 Is Confidentiality Habit Forming?; Infrastructure Pricing; The Role of Concessional Finance; Environmental and Social Obligations; Chapter 6 Structural Issues; Key Contractual Arrangements in the Resource Financed Infrastructure Model; Tendering; Structure of Contract Liabilities and Settlement of Disputes, Current Practices, Main Issues, and Options; Sharing of Risk; Government Ownership/Joint Ventures
Chapter 7 Operational Issues Quality of the Infrastructure/Third-Party Supervision; Operation and Maintenance of Infrastructure; Specification of Technical Standards and Monitoring Requirements; Box 7.1 Choosing Standards; Chapter 8 Conclusions; Part 3 Comments; Comments by Paul Collier; Comments by Alan Gelb; Comments by Justin Yifu Lin* and Yan Wang**; Comments by Clare Short; Box A.1 The EITI Standard's Treatment of Resource Financed Infrastructure; Comments by Louis T. Wells; Back Cover
Record Nr. UNINA-9910814816403321
Halland Havard  
Washington, DC : , : International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank, , 2014
Materiale a stampa
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
Opac: Controlla la disponibilità qui