Internal Conflicts and Shocks

Do income shocks locally affect internal conflicts To address this question, this paper employs a meta-regression analysis of 2,464 infranational estimates from 64 recent empirical studies on conflicts and income-related shocks in developing countries. After accounting for publication selection bias, the analysis finds that, on average, wealth-increasing shocks in the agriculture sector are negatively associated with the local risk of conflict. Nonetheless, the analysis finds no average effect of wealth-decreasing shocks in the agriculture sector or wealth-increasing shocks in the extractive sector on the local risk of conflict. The paper also shows that studies that fail to uncover empirical effects that conform to researchers’ expectations on the theoretical mechanisms are less likely to be published. Differences in the geographical area of study, the choice of control variables, and the way shocks are measured substantially explain the heterogeneity among estimates in the literature.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laville, Camille, Mandon, Pierre
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2023-02-27T18:14:09Z
Subjects:CONFLICT, CLIMATE SHOCK, COMMODITY SHOCKS, NATURAL RESOURCES, INCOME-DRIVEN CONFLICT, META-REGRESSION ANALYSIS, LOCAL RISK OF CONFLICT, WEALTH-INCREASING SHOCK,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099024402232348023/IDU0580a732f0160c04a690950100390349bc4d5
https://worldbank7-prod.atmire.com/handle/10986/39473
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!