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The Resource Curse, or Who Owns Natural Resources? – Philosophy Tube

Philosophy Tube | April 1, 2026



Who do natural resources belong to? Why are many resource-rich countries so poor and what can we do about it? Watch and find out!
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Suggested Reading:
Leif Wenar, “Property Rights and the Resource Curse” http://tinyurl.com/q5jxnpo
Thomas Pogge, “World Poverty and Human Rights”

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Written by Philosophy Tube

Comments

This post currently has 24 comments.

  1. @dawnmoore9122

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    Resources belong to the working class worldwide but as long as we live under capitalism, the idea of the UK etc. just buying products with high tariffs from countries that would buy the resources from dictators, then giving the money back, sounds better than not having a helpful system in place.

  2. @ElementalofAir

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    You could say that the natural resources are a feature of the land in which they are acquired, be it through mining, logging, drilling, or any other form of excavation. At that point, the question is to whom the land belongs.

    One could argue that it belongs to the government or the people or nobody at all. I would say it belongs to the nebulous object that is the country, which is represented by a government that runs in accordance to the wills of the people that inhabit it and to the betterment of said country, thereby becoming the anthropomorphized version of the country as a whole.

    If the government does not represent the will of its people, especially if it is doing so via crimes, it also is not an avatar for the country. Until the correct form of government is established, the country is 'dead', lacking a mouth to communicate, nor hands with which to work, nor legs to visit foreign dignitaries. A ghost that can only watch its house being burglarized.

    The reason I come to such a conclusion is because I feel this best explains the trepidation around the idea of someone invading and absconding with anything within the nation. But individuals, although a part of the people, cannot individually sell off these resources in most cases. At most, they'd be compensated if the resources were on land that they owned. And buying from a dictator would only encourage violence and domination for profit, which would be detrimental to all people as time goes on.

    Therefore, if it does belong to someone, meaning it can be stolen, but not by the government nor by the people, the only option left is the country, an entity referred to as an individual and recognized as such around the world. The country does not lose its identity when the person in government changes, nor when immigrants arrive. Therefore, a government who is supported by the people and runs to meet their country's needs would be the only avatars available to sell off its property.

  3. @mishapurser4439

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    The 'International Resource Privilege' is just a guise and dogwhistle for post-colonial imperialism via corporations. Democratic leaders trying to uphold the rights of their people have been murdered with the aid of Western intelligence services to this end.

  4. @bvegannow1936

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    Natural resources belong to everyone or no one.
    Convince gov to let everyone use an acre of free tax free good land to live on and grow food on
    End farm subsidies

  5. @danielrhouck

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    6:36 Are you saying that if Teodoro Obiang, incumbent president of Equatorial Guinea, wanted to listen to you talk about philosophy and politics, you wouldn’t let him?

  6. @nick.culver

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    I think the issue will become a gradient if sorts where you have to decide which governments sufficiently represent the people. Does the US government currently represent the interests of its people? Trump wasn't even elected with a majority of the vote, and large companies seem to do as they please with our natural resources without much ability for an average citizen to control their use. I think it's a legitimate question as to if the American gov truly represents the will of its people.

    Another problem will be picking a time at which to start the clock of who's land and resources are who's. Many political boundaries are less than 100-200 years old. Can you buy things made of resources from the United States without it being theft from the Native American peoples?

    Effective control will always be the situation because trying to figure out if a government sufficiently represents its people is extremely tough, and borders are fluid through history.

    It's a tough question that could work with small countries but would be tough for places like China. The Chinese government doesn't represent it's people and this is essentially advocating not trading with China. I'm not sure that's currently sustainable.

  7. @yansakuya1

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    Power, who or what ever has the most power in the region is the owner of those resources, as isn't that what always boil down to since the very beginning of humanity?

  8. @eyeonfreedomsite1233

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    Thomas Paine had a very unique solution… "Agrarian Justice is the title of a pamphlet written by Paine and published in 1797, which proposed that those who possess cultivated land owe the community a ground rent…" Wikipedia

  9. @kindoflame

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    A very similar concept in economics is the Paradox of Plenty. Economic theory predicts that countries with large amounts of national resources will have large amounts of capital; many countries in the Southern Hemisphere are counterexamples to this. One answer to this is that these countries do have a large amount of capital, although it is not evenly distributed within the country itself. In other words, Mr. Obiang is as rich as the people of Equitorial Guinea are collectively poor. The problem with this answer is that it begs the question of how such an extreme inequality be formed and maintained, which is a whole 'nother branch of economics that is as difficult is it is controversial.

  10. @grim5i

    April 1, 2026 at 4:55 am

    Natural resources are not the source of a nations wealth. Nations are wealthy if their people are productive. The reason for the resource curse is not that the dictator isn't sharing the wealth, it's that he can enable the people to be unproductive by paying them off with oil money. The path to success for ambitious people in a resource cursed nation lies in appeasing the dictator and not in being productive on your own. In fact, the dictator has an incentive to prevent other sectors of the economy from gaining clout because they are a threat to his power. The people of resource cursed nations could still independently pursue the kind of wealth posessed by their non-cursed neighbours, but they don't. Why they don't is what you'll need to explain to understand the resource curse.

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