Regional Windfalls or Beverly Hillbillies? Local and Absentee Ownership of Oil and Gas Royalties
Abstract
The impact of the technological shock to oil and gas production inthe broader economy is important but not well-understood, in part because the distribution of gains is not clear. One important pathway for gains is royalty payments. We empirically study local versus absentee ownership of private gross royalty interests, using over 2 million private leases located across 17 states to characterize local leasing markets and estimate royalty payments from production during the period 2000–2013. We find local capture of oil and gas royalties varies widely, and suggest that accounting for institutional structure is imperative for properly identifying economic impacts. For example, absentee ownership of mineral rights at the state level in our sample ranged from 8 to 72 percent.Accounting for where royalties are received has important implications for long-term economic performance with and without natural resource extraction. When absentee ownership dominates, this renders the producing region similar to a colony, which has recognized long-term economic effects (Acemoglu et al. 2005). Absentee ownership is one important measure that may differentiate “good” and “bad” institutions that affect measures of the resource curse (Mehlum et al. 2006, Michaels 2011). A region with a low degree of absentee ownership receives a large share of the royalties that are generated. Our findings regarding absentee ownership help explain the apparent resource curse in western regions of the United States (James and Aadland 2011, Haggerty et al. 2014), a country with strong institutions.
Using our royalty flow estimates, we employ an econometric model to show that local royalty income flows on average are two to four times larger than wages earned from drilling activity. These results suggest a more significant role for royalties than employment gains, which have been the primary focus of economic research to date (Fleming et al. 2015).