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Commodity Shocks, Factor Intensity and Conflicts in Africa

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dc.contributor.author Gantier, Marcelo
dc.date.accessioned 2021-02-11T18:30:10Z
dc.date.available 2021-02-11T18:30:10Z
dc.date.issued 2020-11-20
dc.identifier.other O130, Q320, Q340, D740
dc.identifier.uri http://repositorio.ucb.edu.bo/xmlui/handle/20.500.12771/384
dc.description.abstract Natural resources are often related to conflicts. The Dal Bo & Dal B ´ o´ (2011) theory states that income shocks affect capital- and labor-intensive sectors differently. Using sub-national cells covering the African continent for 1997-2010, I find that conflicts react differently to positive commodity price shocks depending on their factor intensity. The results show that a positive shock in the capital-intensive mining sector increases conflict likelihood, whereas a positive shock in the labor-intensive agricultural sector reduces it. These impacts are higher for sub-Saharan Africa. When testing heterogeneous effects for the degree of commodity appropriability, historical African-specific factors, and quality of institutions, I find that easily taxed crops behave differently to an increase in international crop prices. In the same vein, I find that neither historical African-specific factors nor the quality of institutions seem to induce differential responses in conflicts to commodity price shocks. es_ES
dc.language.iso en es_ES
dc.publisher Universidad Católica Boliviana "San Pablo". IISEC. es_ES
dc.relation.ispartofseries Documento de Trabajo IISEC-UCB;N° 05/2020
dc.subject Recursos Naturales es_ES
dc.subject Conflictos es_ES
dc.subject Commodity Shocks es_ES
dc.title Commodity Shocks, Factor Intensity and Conflicts in Africa es_ES
dc.type Working Paper es_ES


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