Political Violence and Economic Growth

This paper analyzes the economic growth impact of organized political violence. First, the authors articulate the theoretical underpinnings of the growth impact of political violence in a popular model of growth under uncertainty. The authors show...

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Main Authors: Bodea, Cristina, Elbadawi, Ibrahim A.
Format: Policy Research Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
IMF
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/08/9766080/political-violence-economic-growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6805
id okr-10986-6805
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ADULT MORTALITY
ARMED CONFLICT
BATTLE
BULLETIN
CASUALTIES
CIVIL PEACE
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
CIVIL WAR
CIVIL WARS
CONFLICT
CONFLICT ECONOMIES
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CONFLICTS
COST OF WAR
COSTS OF CONFLICT
COSTS OF WAR
CULTURAL CHANGE
DEATHS
DEMOCRACY
DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
DEPENDENCE
DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
DURATION OF CONFLICT
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC RELATIONS
ELECTIONS
ETHNIC DIVERSITY
ETHNIC DIVISIONS
ETHNIC DOMINANCE
ETHNIC FRACTIONALIZATION
ETHNICALLY DIVERSE SOCIETIES
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL SHOCKS
EXTORTION
FIGHTING
FIRE
FOREIGN AID
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN POLICY
FRONTIER
GENDER GAP
GRAVE
GROWTH COLLAPSES
GROWTH MODEL
GROWTH MODELS
HEALTH IMPACT
HIGH RISK
HUMAN BEINGS
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN LIFE
HUMAN SECURITY
IMF
IMPACT ON HEALTH
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME PER CAPITA
INTERNAL CONFLICTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
LABOR MARKET
LAW ENFORCEMENT
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MALARIA
MEETING
MIDDLE EAST
MILITARY ACTIVITIES
MILITARY EXPENDITURE
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
NATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEUTRALITY
NORTH AFRICA
PEACE
PEACE RESEARCH
POLARIZATION
POLICES
POLICY RESEARCH
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
POLITICAL CHANGE
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
POLITICAL POWER
POLITICAL SYSTEMS
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
POST CONFLICT
POST-CONFLICT
PROBABILITY OF WAR
PROGRESS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC POLICY
QUALITY OF SERVICES
RATE OF GROWTH
RATES OF GROWTH
RECONSTRUCTION
RELIGIOUS DIVISION
RELIGIOUS FRACTIONALIZATION
RESPECT
RIOT
RIOTS
RISK OF WAR
RISKY BEHAVIOR
RULE OF LAW
SANCTIONS
SAVINGS
SECONDARY SCHOOL
SERVICE DELIVERY
SOCIAL CLASS
SOCIAL COHESION
SOCIAL CONFLICT
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES
SOCIAL DIVERSITY
SOCIAL FRACTIONALIZATION
STARVATION
STATE UNIVERSITY
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
TERRORISM
TERRORIST
UNDERDEVELOPMENT
VIOLENT CONFLICT
VIOLENT MEANS
WAR DURATION
WARFARE
spellingShingle ADULT MORTALITY
ARMED CONFLICT
BATTLE
BULLETIN
CASUALTIES
CIVIL PEACE
CIVIL SOCIETY
CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS
CIVIL WAR
CIVIL WARS
CONFLICT
CONFLICT ECONOMIES
CONFLICT MANAGEMENT
CONFLICT RESOLUTION
CONFLICTS
COST OF WAR
COSTS OF CONFLICT
COSTS OF WAR
CULTURAL CHANGE
DEATHS
DEMOCRACY
DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS
DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS
DEPENDENCE
DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
DURATION OF CONFLICT
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC POLICIES
ECONOMIC RELATIONS
ELECTIONS
ETHNIC DIVERSITY
ETHNIC DIVISIONS
ETHNIC DOMINANCE
ETHNIC FRACTIONALIZATION
ETHNICALLY DIVERSE SOCIETIES
EXTERNAL DEBT
EXTERNAL SHOCKS
EXTORTION
FIGHTING
FIRE
FOREIGN AID
FOREIGN INVESTMENT
FOREIGN INVESTORS
FOREIGN POLICY
FRONTIER
GENDER GAP
GRAVE
GROWTH COLLAPSES
GROWTH MODEL
GROWTH MODELS
HEALTH IMPACT
HIGH RISK
HUMAN BEINGS
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN LIFE
HUMAN SECURITY
IMF
IMPACT ON HEALTH
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INCOME PER CAPITA
INTERNAL CONFLICTS
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
INTERNATIONAL SECURITY
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES
JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION
LABOR MARKET
LAW ENFORCEMENT
LIFE EXPECTANCY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MALARIA
MEETING
MIDDLE EAST
MILITARY ACTIVITIES
MILITARY EXPENDITURE
MORTALITY
MORTALITY RATE
NATIONS
NATURAL RESOURCES
NEUTRALITY
NORTH AFRICA
PEACE
PEACE RESEARCH
POLARIZATION
POLICES
POLICY RESEARCH
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
POLITICAL CHANGE
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
POLITICAL POWER
POLITICAL SYSTEMS
POLITICAL VIOLENCE
POST CONFLICT
POST-CONFLICT
PROBABILITY OF WAR
PROGRESS
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PUBLIC HEALTH
PUBLIC POLICY
QUALITY OF SERVICES
RATE OF GROWTH
RATES OF GROWTH
RECONSTRUCTION
RELIGIOUS DIVISION
RELIGIOUS FRACTIONALIZATION
RESPECT
RIOT
RIOTS
RISK OF WAR
RISKY BEHAVIOR
RULE OF LAW
SANCTIONS
SAVINGS
SECONDARY SCHOOL
SERVICE DELIVERY
SOCIAL CLASS
SOCIAL COHESION
SOCIAL CONFLICT
SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES
SOCIAL DIVERSITY
SOCIAL FRACTIONALIZATION
STARVATION
STATE UNIVERSITY
SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA
TERRORISM
TERRORIST
UNDERDEVELOPMENT
VIOLENT CONFLICT
VIOLENT MEANS
WAR DURATION
WARFARE
Bodea, Cristina
Elbadawi, Ibrahim A.
Political Violence and Economic Growth
relation Policy Research Working Paper No. 4692
description This paper analyzes the economic growth impact of organized political violence. First, the authors articulate the theoretical underpinnings of the growth impact of political violence in a popular model of growth under uncertainty. The authors show that, under plausible assumptions regarding attitudes toward risk, the overall effects of organized political violence are likely to be much higher than its direct capital destruction impact. Second, using a quantitative model of violence that distinguishes between three levels of political violence (riots, coups, and civil war), the authors use predicted probabilities of aggregate violence and its three manifestations to identify their growth effects in an encompassing growth model. Panel regressions suggest that organized political violence, especially civil war, significantly lowers long-term economic growth. Moreover, unlike most previous studies, the authors also find ethnic fractionalization to have a negative and direct effect on growth, though its effect is substantially ameliorated by the institutions specific to a non-factional partial democracy. Third, the results show that Sub-Saharan Africa has been disproportionately impacted by civil war, which explains a substantial share of its economic decline, including the widening income gap relative to East Asia. Civil wars have also been costly for Sub-Saharan Africa. For the case of Sudan, a typical large African country experiencing a long-duration conflict, the cost of war amounts to $46 billion (in 2000 fixed prices), which is roughly double the country's current stock of external debt. Fourth, the authors suggest that to break free from its conflict-underdevelopment trap, Africa needs to better manage its ethnic diversity. The way to do this would be to develop inclusive, non-factional democracy. A democratic but factional polity would not work, and would be only marginally better than an authoritarian regime.
format Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
author Bodea, Cristina
Elbadawi, Ibrahim A.
author_facet Bodea, Cristina
Elbadawi, Ibrahim A.
author_sort Bodea, Cristina
title Political Violence and Economic Growth
title_short Political Violence and Economic Growth
title_full Political Violence and Economic Growth
title_fullStr Political Violence and Economic Growth
title_full_unstemmed Political Violence and Economic Growth
title_sort political violence and economic growth
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/08/9766080/political-violence-economic-growth
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6805
_version_ 1764401118659477504
spelling okr-10986-68052021-04-23T14:02:32Z Political Violence and Economic Growth Bodea, Cristina Elbadawi, Ibrahim A. ADULT MORTALITY ARMED CONFLICT BATTLE BULLETIN CASUALTIES CIVIL PEACE CIVIL SOCIETY CIVIL SOCIETY ORGANIZATIONS CIVIL WAR CIVIL WARS CONFLICT CONFLICT ECONOMIES CONFLICT MANAGEMENT CONFLICT RESOLUTION CONFLICTS COST OF WAR COSTS OF CONFLICT COSTS OF WAR CULTURAL CHANGE DEATHS DEMOCRACY DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS DEMOGRAPHIC FACTORS DEPENDENCE DETERMINANTS OF GROWTH DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES DOMESTIC VIOLENCE DURATION OF CONFLICT ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC POLICIES ECONOMIC RELATIONS ELECTIONS ETHNIC DIVERSITY ETHNIC DIVISIONS ETHNIC DOMINANCE ETHNIC FRACTIONALIZATION ETHNICALLY DIVERSE SOCIETIES EXTERNAL DEBT EXTERNAL SHOCKS EXTORTION FIGHTING FIRE FOREIGN AID FOREIGN INVESTMENT FOREIGN INVESTORS FOREIGN POLICY FRONTIER GENDER GAP GRAVE GROWTH COLLAPSES GROWTH MODEL GROWTH MODELS HEALTH IMPACT HIGH RISK HUMAN BEINGS HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN LIFE HUMAN SECURITY IMF IMPACT ON HEALTH INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME PER CAPITA INTERNAL CONFLICTS INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS INTERNATIONAL SECURITY INTERNATIONAL STUDIES JOURNAL OF CONFLICT RESOLUTION LABOR MARKET LAW ENFORCEMENT LIFE EXPECTANCY LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MALARIA MEETING MIDDLE EAST MILITARY ACTIVITIES MILITARY EXPENDITURE MORTALITY MORTALITY RATE NATIONS NATURAL RESOURCES NEUTRALITY NORTH AFRICA PEACE PEACE RESEARCH POLARIZATION POLICES POLICY RESEARCH POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER POLITICAL CHANGE POLITICAL INSTABILITY POLITICAL PARTICIPATION POLITICAL POWER POLITICAL SYSTEMS POLITICAL VIOLENCE POST CONFLICT POST-CONFLICT PROBABILITY OF WAR PROGRESS PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC POLICY QUALITY OF SERVICES RATE OF GROWTH RATES OF GROWTH RECONSTRUCTION RELIGIOUS DIVISION RELIGIOUS FRACTIONALIZATION RESPECT RIOT RIOTS RISK OF WAR RISKY BEHAVIOR RULE OF LAW SANCTIONS SAVINGS SECONDARY SCHOOL SERVICE DELIVERY SOCIAL CLASS SOCIAL COHESION SOCIAL CONFLICT SOCIAL CONSEQUENCES SOCIAL DIVERSITY SOCIAL FRACTIONALIZATION STARVATION STATE UNIVERSITY SUB-SAHARAN AFRICA TERRORISM TERRORIST UNDERDEVELOPMENT VIOLENT CONFLICT VIOLENT MEANS WAR DURATION WARFARE This paper analyzes the economic growth impact of organized political violence. First, the authors articulate the theoretical underpinnings of the growth impact of political violence in a popular model of growth under uncertainty. The authors show that, under plausible assumptions regarding attitudes toward risk, the overall effects of organized political violence are likely to be much higher than its direct capital destruction impact. Second, using a quantitative model of violence that distinguishes between three levels of political violence (riots, coups, and civil war), the authors use predicted probabilities of aggregate violence and its three manifestations to identify their growth effects in an encompassing growth model. Panel regressions suggest that organized political violence, especially civil war, significantly lowers long-term economic growth. Moreover, unlike most previous studies, the authors also find ethnic fractionalization to have a negative and direct effect on growth, though its effect is substantially ameliorated by the institutions specific to a non-factional partial democracy. Third, the results show that Sub-Saharan Africa has been disproportionately impacted by civil war, which explains a substantial share of its economic decline, including the widening income gap relative to East Asia. Civil wars have also been costly for Sub-Saharan Africa. For the case of Sudan, a typical large African country experiencing a long-duration conflict, the cost of war amounts to $46 billion (in 2000 fixed prices), which is roughly double the country's current stock of external debt. Fourth, the authors suggest that to break free from its conflict-underdevelopment trap, Africa needs to better manage its ethnic diversity. The way to do this would be to develop inclusive, non-factional democracy. A democratic but factional polity would not work, and would be only marginally better than an authoritarian regime. 2012-05-31T21:08:48Z 2012-05-31T21:08:48Z 2008-08 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/08/9766080/political-violence-economic-growth http://hdl.handle.net/10986/6805 English Policy Research Working Paper No. 4692 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research