Rentier state: differenze tra le versioni
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Riga 10:
# e, forse la più importante, il governo dello stato è il principale beneficiario della rendita esterna.<ref name="Beblawi"/>
L'emergere dei nuovi stati [[Petrolio|petroliferi]] e la loro crescente importanza nel commercio mondiale negli [[Anni 1970|anni '70]] portò un rinnovato interesse nel pensiero sulle economie di rendita nelle sopramenzionate discipline delle [[scienze politiche]] e delle [[relazioni internazionali]].
<blockquote>embodies a break in the work-reward causation ... [r]ewards of income and wealth for the rentier do not come as the result of work but rather are the result of chance or situation.</blockquote>
Hazem Beblawi has argued that this could create a “rentier mentality,”<ref name="Beblawi">ibid, p.88</ref> while [[Political science|political scientist]] [[Fareed Zakaria]] has posited that such states fail to develop politically because, in the absence of taxes, citizens have less incentive to place pressure on the government to become responsive to their needs. Instead, the government essentially 'bribes' the citizenry with extensive [[social welfare]] programs, becoming an '''allocation''' or '''distributive state'''. The budget, in effect, is little more than an expenditure programme.<ref name="Beblawi">ibid, p.90</ref> Moreover, because control of the rent-producing resources is concentrated in the hands of the authorities, it may be used to alternately coerce or coopt their populace, while the distinction between public service and private interest becomes increasingly blurred.-----------------><ref name="Beblawi"/> Secondo [[Noah Feldman]] non c'è
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