Economic Systems

The formal economy of the Arctic is mainly based on large-scale exploitation of natural resources (e.g. mineral, oil and gas, and fish), most of which are exported. The service sector is well developed in many parts of the Arctic, whereas manufacturing plays a relatively minor role. Public services...

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Main Authors: Duhaime, Gérard, Lemelin, André, Didyk, Vladimir, Goldsmith, Oliver, Winther, Gorm, Caron, Andrée, Bernard, Nick, Godmaire, Anne
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Arctic Council 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/151524
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author Duhaime, Gérard
Lemelin, André
Didyk, Vladimir
Goldsmith, Oliver
Winther, Gorm
Caron, Andrée
Bernard, Nick
Godmaire, Anne
author_facet Duhaime, Gérard
Lemelin, André
Didyk, Vladimir
Goldsmith, Oliver
Winther, Gorm
Caron, Andrée
Bernard, Nick
Godmaire, Anne
author_sort Duhaime, Gérard
collection Université Laval: CorpusUL
description The formal economy of the Arctic is mainly based on large-scale exploitation of natural resources (e.g. mineral, oil and gas, and fish), most of which are exported. The service sector is well developed in many parts of the Arctic, whereas manufacturing plays a relatively minor role. Public services are often supported by transfer payments from central governments but overall, more money is flowing out of the Arctic than into the region. The large-scale exploitation of Arctic resources is important to the national economies of several Arctic countries, as well as in the global economy. This is especially true for the Russian Arctic. The size and structure of the economy differ between and within countries. The gaps between wealthy and poor regions appear everywhere but are most extreme in Russia and North America. The Arctic is likely to continue to play a role as a reservoir of resources for the rest of the world. New trends are privatization of resources and new forms of economic partnerships. 0
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spelling ftunivlavalcorp:oai:corpus.ulaval.ca:20.500.11794/151524 2025-05-18T13:56:28+00:00 Economic Systems Duhaime, Gérard Lemelin, André Didyk, Vladimir Goldsmith, Oliver Winther, Gorm Caron, Andrée Bernard, Nick Godmaire, Anne Arctique 2024-09-24T11:39:52Z pages 69-84 application/pdf https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/151524 eng eng Arctic Council Arctic Human Development Report https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/151524 http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_abf2 Développement économique chapitre d'ouvrage 2024 ftunivlavalcorp https://doi.org/20.500.11794/151524 2025-04-20T23:51:34Z The formal economy of the Arctic is mainly based on large-scale exploitation of natural resources (e.g. mineral, oil and gas, and fish), most of which are exported. The service sector is well developed in many parts of the Arctic, whereas manufacturing plays a relatively minor role. Public services are often supported by transfer payments from central governments but overall, more money is flowing out of the Arctic than into the region. The large-scale exploitation of Arctic resources is important to the national economies of several Arctic countries, as well as in the global economy. This is especially true for the Russian Arctic. The size and structure of the economy differ between and within countries. The gaps between wealthy and poor regions appear everywhere but are most extreme in Russia and North America. The Arctic is likely to continue to play a role as a reservoir of resources for the rest of the world. New trends are privatization of resources and new forms of economic partnerships. 0 Book Part Arctic Arctic Arctique* Université Laval: CorpusUL Arctic
spellingShingle Développement économique
Duhaime, Gérard
Lemelin, André
Didyk, Vladimir
Goldsmith, Oliver
Winther, Gorm
Caron, Andrée
Bernard, Nick
Godmaire, Anne
Economic Systems
title Economic Systems
title_full Economic Systems
title_fullStr Economic Systems
title_full_unstemmed Economic Systems
title_short Economic Systems
title_sort economic systems
topic Développement économique
topic_facet Développement économique
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/151524