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Havard Halland

Researcher at OECD Development Centre

Publications -  22
Citations -  222

Havard Halland is an academic researcher from OECD Development Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Institutional investor & Fiscal policy. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 21 publications receiving 184 citations. Previous affiliations of Havard Halland include World Bank & University of Nottingham.

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BookDOI

Sovereign Wealth Funds and Long-Term Development Finance : Risks and Opportunities

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors propose a set of checks and balances to ensure that domestic investments do not undermine the fund's role in the area of sovereign wealth, in order to support hard-earned efforts to sustain macroeconomic stability.
Book

The Extractive Industries Sector: Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers

TL;DR: The extractive industries (EI) sector occupies an outsize space in the economies of many developing countries and is frequently confronted with issues that require an in-depth understanding of the sector as discussed by the authors.
Posted Content

Explaining the procyclicality of fiscal policy in developing countries

TL;DR: In this paper, competing hypotheses are tested on a comprehensive set of measures of the cyclicality of fiscal policy, and the evidence for corruption and democracy is stronger than for social inequality or net foreign debt.
Book

Fiscal Management in Resource-Rich Countries: Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the two-volume Essentials for Economists, Public Finance Professionals, and Policy Makers, published in the World Bank Studies series, to provide a concise overview of the EI-related topics these professionals are likely to encounter.
Journal ArticleDOI

Natural Resource Exports, Fiscal Policy Volatility and Growth

TL;DR: This article showed that macroeconomic policy is more erratic in countries that are rich in natural resources, especially minerals and fuels, and in those that receive large aid inflows, and that poor institutions also play a role.