Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence

Haiti's economic development has been held back by a history of civil conflict and violence. With donor assistance declining from its exceptional levels following the 2010 earthquake, and concessional financing growing scarce, Haiti must learn...

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Main Authors: Singh, Raju Jan, Bodea, Cristina, Higashijima, Masaaki
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
IMF
WAR
LAW
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26396742/guns-books-or-doctors-conflict-public-spending-haiti-lessons-cross-country-evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24518
id okr-10986-24518
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-245182021-04-23T14:04:22Z Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence Singh, Raju Jan Bodea, Cristina Higashijima, Masaaki SANITATION LIVING STANDARDS TERRORISM ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE CIVIL CONFLICT CIVIL LIBERTIES CONFLICT MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH MILITIAS URBANIZATION DEATHS TOLERANCE MILITARY PERSONNEL MILITARY REGIMES JUNTA NATIONS ADEQUATE EDUCATION POLITICAL RIGHTS LABOR FORCE DEVELOPING COUNTRIES LEVEL OF POVERTY INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT PUBLIC SERVICES HEALTH CARE CONSTRAINTS CIVIL UNREST POLICY DISCUSSIONS ETHNIC GROUP SOLDIERS MILITARY EXPENDITURE LITERACY RATES SOCIAL PROGRAMS NATIONAL LEVEL INDEPENDENCE POPULATION SIZE CONFLICT INTERNATIONAL BANK SAFETY NETS REBELS HEALTH SECTOR FIREARMS ARMED CONFLICT INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS MILITARY BUDGETS POLITICAL VIOLENCE DISPUTES MILITARY SPENDING EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT AIR FORCE FOREIGN AID BABY REGIONAL CONFLICT MATERIAL RESOURCES DEMOCRACY CITIZEN YOUNG MALE VIOLENCE DEBT WORLD DEVELOPMENT TRUST HOUSEHOLD INCOME SECURITY FORCES COERCION SOCIAL SECURITY SCHOOL STUDENTS ARMED FORCES PRIMARY SCHOOL STATE UNIVERSITY SOCIAL EXPENDITURES RULE OF LAW URBAN DWELLERS EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES POLITICAL SUPPORT GRANTS PROGRESS GENOCIDE UNEMPLOYMENT ENERGY CONSUMPTION HUMAN CAPITAL EARTHQUAKE ELECTIONS IMF OBSERVERS POLICIES YOUNG SOLDIERS MILITARY LOW-INCOME COUNTRY POLICE BASIC NEEDS POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER PENSIONS RAPES REBEL COLD WAR URBAN CENTERS PROVISION OF EDUCATION INTERPERSONAL SKILLS BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE WORKSHOP VICTIMS POLITICAL OPPOSITION ECONOMY VIOLENT CONFLICT NATION POPULATIONS BATTLE POLICY FIGHTING INTERNATIONAL STUDIES SOCIAL WELFARE QUALITY OF LIFE POPULOUS COUNTRIES CITIZENS BATTLES SOCIAL POLICIES INTERNATIONAL WAR SOCIAL SECTORS INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT HUMAN RIGHTS ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES WARS WAR MILITARY FORCES NATURAL RESOURCE ARMY RURAL AREAS ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY ARMS LIMITED RESOURCES NATIONALISM YOUNG PEOPLE SOCIAL COHESION REHABILITATION POPULATION CONFLICTS EXTERNAL DEBT LAW DEFENSE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS URBAN SLUMS POLICY RESEARCH CIVIL WAR AGREEMENT POLITICAL PROCESS CONFLICT RESOLUTION PEACE RESEARCH DEPENDENCE PEACE PROCESS REMITTANCES CIVIL WARS PUBLIC SERVICE MILITARIZATION SECONDARY EDUCATION ADULT LITERACY REVOLUTIONS POLITICAL PARTICIPATION SOCIAL MOBILITY PEACE POLITICAL INSTABILITY WORLD DEVELOPMENT RECONSTRUCTION PEACEKEEPING NAVY ECONOMIES DEVELOPMENT POLICY HUMAN DEVELOPMENT Haiti's economic development has been held back by a history of civil conflict and violence. With donor assistance declining from its exceptional levels following the 2010 earthquake, and concessional financing growing scarce, Haiti must learn to live with tighter budget constraints. At the same time, the United Nations forces that have provided security in the past decade are scaling down. Against this backdrop, this paper explores the conditions under which public spending can minimize violent conflict, and draws possible lessons for Haiti. Drawing on an empirical analysis of 148 countries over the period 1960-2009, simulations for Haiti suggest that increases in military spending would be associated with a higher risk of conflict, an observation in line with Haiti's own history. Greater welfare expenditure (education, health, and social assistance), by contrast, would be associated with lower risk of conflict. 2016-06-13T22:17:35Z 2016-06-13T22:17:35Z 2016-05 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26396742/guns-books-or-doctors-conflict-public-spending-haiti-lessons-cross-country-evidence http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24518 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7681 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Latin America & Caribbean Haiti
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic SANITATION
LIVING STANDARDS
TERRORISM
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE
CIVIL CONFLICT
CIVIL LIBERTIES
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
MILITIAS
URBANIZATION
DEATHS
TOLERANCE
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY REGIMES
JUNTA
NATIONS
ADEQUATE EDUCATION
POLITICAL RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
LEVEL OF POVERTY
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
PUBLIC SERVICES
HEALTH CARE
CONSTRAINTS
CIVIL UNREST
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
ETHNIC GROUP
SOLDIERS
MILITARY EXPENDITURE
LITERACY RATES
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
NATIONAL LEVEL
INDEPENDENCE
POPULATION SIZE
CONFLICT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
SAFETY NETS
REBELS
HEALTH SECTOR
FIREARMS
ARMED CONFLICT
INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS
MILITARY BUDGETS
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
DISPUTES
MILITARY SPENDING
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
AIR FORCE
FOREIGN AID
BABY
REGIONAL CONFLICT
MATERIAL RESOURCES
DEMOCRACY
CITIZEN
YOUNG MALE
VIOLENCE
DEBT
WORLD DEVELOPMENT
TRUST
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SECURITY FORCES
COERCION
SOCIAL SECURITY
SCHOOL STUDENTS
ARMED FORCES
PRIMARY SCHOOL
STATE UNIVERSITY
SOCIAL EXPENDITURES
RULE OF LAW
URBAN DWELLERS
EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
POLITICAL SUPPORT
GRANTS
PROGRESS
GENOCIDE
UNEMPLOYMENT
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
HUMAN CAPITAL
EARTHQUAKE
ELECTIONS
IMF
OBSERVERS
POLICIES
YOUNG SOLDIERS
MILITARY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
POLICE
BASIC NEEDS
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
PENSIONS
RAPES
REBEL
COLD WAR
URBAN CENTERS
PROVISION OF EDUCATION
INTERPERSONAL SKILLS
BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE
WORKSHOP
VICTIMS
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
ECONOMY
VIOLENT CONFLICT
NATION
POPULATIONS
BATTLE
POLICY
FIGHTING
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
SOCIAL WELFARE
QUALITY OF LIFE
POPULOUS COUNTRIES
CITIZENS
BATTLES
SOCIAL POLICIES
INTERNATIONAL WAR
SOCIAL SECTORS
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN RIGHTS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
WARS
WAR
MILITARY FORCES
NATURAL RESOURCE
ARMY
RURAL AREAS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
ARMS
LIMITED RESOURCES
NATIONALISM
YOUNG PEOPLE
SOCIAL COHESION
REHABILITATION
POPULATION
CONFLICTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
LAW
DEFENSE
UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS
URBAN SLUMS
POLICY RESEARCH
CIVIL WAR
AGREEMENT
POLITICAL PROCESS
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
PEACE RESEARCH
DEPENDENCE
PEACE PROCESS
REMITTANCES
CIVIL WARS
PUBLIC SERVICE
MILITARIZATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
ADULT LITERACY
REVOLUTIONS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
SOCIAL MOBILITY
PEACE
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
WORLD DEVELOPMENT
RECONSTRUCTION
PEACEKEEPING
NAVY
ECONOMIES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle SANITATION
LIVING STANDARDS
TERRORISM
ACCESS TO HEALTH CARE
CIVIL CONFLICT
CIVIL LIBERTIES
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
MILITIAS
URBANIZATION
DEATHS
TOLERANCE
MILITARY PERSONNEL
MILITARY REGIMES
JUNTA
NATIONS
ADEQUATE EDUCATION
POLITICAL RIGHTS
LABOR FORCE
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
LEVEL OF POVERTY
INTERNATIONAL CONFLICT
PUBLIC SERVICES
HEALTH CARE
CONSTRAINTS
CIVIL UNREST
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
ETHNIC GROUP
SOLDIERS
MILITARY EXPENDITURE
LITERACY RATES
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
NATIONAL LEVEL
INDEPENDENCE
POPULATION SIZE
CONFLICT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
SAFETY NETS
REBELS
HEALTH SECTOR
FIREARMS
ARMED CONFLICT
INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS
MILITARY BUDGETS
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
DISPUTES
MILITARY SPENDING
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
AIR FORCE
FOREIGN AID
BABY
REGIONAL CONFLICT
MATERIAL RESOURCES
DEMOCRACY
CITIZEN
YOUNG MALE
VIOLENCE
DEBT
WORLD DEVELOPMENT
TRUST
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SECURITY FORCES
COERCION
SOCIAL SECURITY
SCHOOL STUDENTS
ARMED FORCES
PRIMARY SCHOOL
STATE UNIVERSITY
SOCIAL EXPENDITURES
RULE OF LAW
URBAN DWELLERS
EQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
POLITICAL SUPPORT
GRANTS
PROGRESS
GENOCIDE
UNEMPLOYMENT
ENERGY CONSUMPTION
HUMAN CAPITAL
EARTHQUAKE
ELECTIONS
IMF
OBSERVERS
POLICIES
YOUNG SOLDIERS
MILITARY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRY
POLICE
BASIC NEEDS
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
PENSIONS
RAPES
REBEL
COLD WAR
URBAN CENTERS
PROVISION OF EDUCATION
INTERPERSONAL SKILLS
BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE
WORKSHOP
VICTIMS
POLITICAL OPPOSITION
ECONOMY
VIOLENT CONFLICT
NATION
POPULATIONS
BATTLE
POLICY
FIGHTING
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
SOCIAL WELFARE
QUALITY OF LIFE
POPULOUS COUNTRIES
CITIZENS
BATTLES
SOCIAL POLICIES
INTERNATIONAL WAR
SOCIAL SECTORS
INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATION
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN RIGHTS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
WARS
WAR
MILITARY FORCES
NATURAL RESOURCE
ARMY
RURAL AREAS
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
ARMS
LIMITED RESOURCES
NATIONALISM
YOUNG PEOPLE
SOCIAL COHESION
REHABILITATION
POPULATION
CONFLICTS
EXTERNAL DEBT
LAW
DEFENSE
UNIVERSITY
STUDENTS
URBAN SLUMS
POLICY RESEARCH
CIVIL WAR
AGREEMENT
POLITICAL PROCESS
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
PEACE RESEARCH
DEPENDENCE
PEACE PROCESS
REMITTANCES
CIVIL WARS
PUBLIC SERVICE
MILITARIZATION
SECONDARY EDUCATION
ADULT LITERACY
REVOLUTIONS
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
SOCIAL MOBILITY
PEACE
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
WORLD DEVELOPMENT
RECONSTRUCTION
PEACEKEEPING
NAVY
ECONOMIES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
Singh, Raju Jan
Bodea, Cristina
Higashijima, Masaaki
Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
Haiti
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7681
description Haiti's economic development has been held back by a history of civil conflict and violence. With donor assistance declining from its exceptional levels following the 2010 earthquake, and concessional financing growing scarce, Haiti must learn to live with tighter budget constraints. At the same time, the United Nations forces that have provided security in the past decade are scaling down. Against this backdrop, this paper explores the conditions under which public spending can minimize violent conflict, and draws possible lessons for Haiti. Drawing on an empirical analysis of 148 countries over the period 1960-2009, simulations for Haiti suggest that increases in military spending would be associated with a higher risk of conflict, an observation in line with Haiti's own history. Greater welfare expenditure (education, health, and social assistance), by contrast, would be associated with lower risk of conflict.
format Working Paper
author Singh, Raju Jan
Bodea, Cristina
Higashijima, Masaaki
author_facet Singh, Raju Jan
Bodea, Cristina
Higashijima, Masaaki
author_sort Singh, Raju Jan
title Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
title_short Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
title_full Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
title_fullStr Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
title_full_unstemmed Guns, Books, or Doctors? Conflict and Public Spending in Haiti : Lessons from Cross-Country Evidence
title_sort guns, books, or doctors? conflict and public spending in haiti : lessons from cross-country evidence
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/05/26396742/guns-books-or-doctors-conflict-public-spending-haiti-lessons-cross-country-evidence
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/24518
_version_ 1764456929577402368