This book rejects the idea that natural resource industries are doomed
to slow growth. Rather, it examines the case of Norway to demonstrate
that such industries can prove highly innovative and dynamic.
Here, the case is compellingly made that a key empirical problem with
the popular 'resource curse' argument is that some of the richest
countries in the world - namely Norway, Sweden, Canada and Australia -
have all developed fast-growing economies based on natural resources.
Analysis of innovation and knowledge development in natural resource
industries reveal important new insights about the role of learning and
innovation. These insights are key to understanding variances in growth
levels between natural resource-based economies.
Ranestad illustrates how Norway's high economic performance is built on
knowledge-based natural resource industries. While Norwegian industries
may have originated because of foreign technology and expertise, they
thrived due to further developments carried out by organisations within
Norway. Ranestad looks at how these developments were possible due to
the country's high level of human capital, capacity for knowledge
absorption and ability to adapt to new global technological and economic
circumstances.