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Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?

This study sets out to evaluate the impact of industrial mining on local economies, within a context of a developing country with a strict procurement policy on its extractive industry. It contributes empirical evidence on two main ideas on the impact of mining on local communities. The one idea is...

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Main Author: Nxele, Musawenkosi
Other Authors: Morris, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: School of Economics 2017
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nxele, Musawenkosi
author2 Morris, Michael
author_browse Morris, Michael
Nxele, Musawenkosi
author_facet Morris, Michael
Nxele, Musawenkosi
author_sort Nxele, Musawenkosi
collection Thesis
description This study sets out to evaluate the impact of industrial mining on local economies, within a context of a developing country with a strict procurement policy on its extractive industry. It contributes empirical evidence on two main ideas on the impact of mining on local communities. The one idea is that mining has a positive impact on local communities because it creates economic activity through economic linkages with local markets; and thus contributes to local industrialisation, economic development, and poverty reduction. The other idea is that mining harms local economies through negative impacts on the environment; which hurts local agriculture and health, leading to an increase in local poverty. By evaluating a case study of a poor rural economy driven by mining and agriculture, this study measures the net average impact of the opening and expansion of mining on local income poverty. Using ward level data combined with firm data, the study essentially uses a difference-in-differences estimation procedure, by exploiting a local input demand shock from large industrial mines, as well as changes in distance to a mine, as sources of variation. The study finds that the opening of a mine is associated with poverty reduction in surrounding communities, while the impact from an expansion of a mine depends on the type of commodity mined. Unpacking these results by commodity gives insight into the concentration of labour and community unrest in the platinum and gold mining sectors in South Africa. The findings of this study remain robust to different indicators of mine expansion, and checks for alternative explanations such as selective migration and sample checks. The study uses the Limpopo Province of South Africa as a suitable case study.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:42.829Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2017
publishDateRange 2017
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publisher School of Economics
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/24930 Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'? Nxele, Musawenkosi Morris, Michael Economic Development This study sets out to evaluate the impact of industrial mining on local economies, within a context of a developing country with a strict procurement policy on its extractive industry. It contributes empirical evidence on two main ideas on the impact of mining on local communities. The one idea is that mining has a positive impact on local communities because it creates economic activity through economic linkages with local markets; and thus contributes to local industrialisation, economic development, and poverty reduction. The other idea is that mining harms local economies through negative impacts on the environment; which hurts local agriculture and health, leading to an increase in local poverty. By evaluating a case study of a poor rural economy driven by mining and agriculture, this study measures the net average impact of the opening and expansion of mining on local income poverty. Using ward level data combined with firm data, the study essentially uses a difference-in-differences estimation procedure, by exploiting a local input demand shock from large industrial mines, as well as changes in distance to a mine, as sources of variation. The study finds that the opening of a mine is associated with poverty reduction in surrounding communities, while the impact from an expansion of a mine depends on the type of commodity mined. Unpacking these results by commodity gives insight into the concentration of labour and community unrest in the platinum and gold mining sectors in South Africa. The findings of this study remain robust to different indicators of mine expansion, and checks for alternative explanations such as selective migration and sample checks. The study uses the Limpopo Province of South Africa as a suitable case study. 2017-08-23T12:51:35Z 2017-08-23T12:51:35Z 2017 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24930 eng application/pdf School of Economics Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Economic Development
Nxele, Musawenkosi
Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
title_full Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
title_fullStr Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
title_full_unstemmed Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
title_short Does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty: Are local community grievances really 'Much Ado about Nothing'?
title_sort does mining alleviate or exacerbate poverty are local community grievances really much ado about nothing
topic Economic Development
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/24930
work_keys_str_mv AT nxelemusawenkosi doesminingalleviateorexacerbatepovertyarelocalcommunitygrievancesreallymuchadoaboutnothing