The seasonality of conflict

Author:

Guardado Jenny1ORCID,Pennings Steven2

Affiliation:

1. Georgetown University, USA

2. World Bank Research Department, USA

Abstract

This paper uses one of the largest changes to labor demand in developing countries—harvest—to examine how the returns to fighting vs. working impact the intensity of conflict. Exploiting the exogenous allocation and timing of harvest across Afghanistan, Iraq, and Pakistan, we find that the onset of harvest reduces the number of insurgent attacks by between 6 and 21%. This is not due to changes in local temperature or rainfall, to name a few possibilities. Moreover, because harvest is transitory and anticipated, our estimates minimize the potential bias present in other persistent income shocks commonly used in the literature.

Funder

Office of Naval Research

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Reference53 articles.

1. Economic Shocks and Conflict: Evidence from Commodity Prices

2. Beath A, Christia F, Enikolopov R (2017) Can Development Programs Counter Insurgencies? Evidence from a Field Experiment in Afghanistan. MIT Political Science Department Research Paper No. 2011-14. https://thedocs.worldbank.org/en/doc/6040f8b34b038f9b360b335a463b0bc7-0050022021/original/Can-Development-Programs-Counter-Insurgencies.pdf.

3. Crime and Punishment: An Economic Approach

4. Rising Food Prices, Food Price Volatility, and Social Unrest

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