This article revisits the relationship between income per capita and civil conflict. We begin by documenting that the empirical literature identifies two different patterns. First, poor countries have a higher propensity to suffer from civil war. Second, civil war occurs when countries suffer negative income shocks. In a formal model we examine an explanation often suggested in the informal literature: civil wars occur in poor countries because the opportunity cost of fighting is small. We show that while this explanation fails to make sense of the first empirical pattern, it provides a coherent theoretical basis for the second. We then enrich the model to allow for private imperfect information about the state of the economy and show that ...
The authors investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theor...
International audienceThere is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but there...
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...
This article revisits the relationship between income per capita and civil conflict. We begin by doc...
Civil war is highly concentrated in poor countries. Nearly all recent quantitative studies find a st...
Most nations have experienced an internal armed conflict since 1960. The past decade has witnessed a...
This article summarizes an empirical investigation of the link between poverty and the incidence of ...
Previous research has interpreted the correlation between per capita income and civil war as evidenc...
Low level of GDP per capita is a robust and widely applied predictor of civil war. Yet, GDP is a cru...
Civil wars are intricate social, political and psychological phenomena. However, economics can offer...
There is a growing body of research that highlights the association between economic conditions and ...
Economists and political scientists have argued that differences in the risk of civil conflict acros...
This paper establishes and explores the implications of a somewhat surprising empirical finding. Alt...
Previous research has interpreted the correlation between per capita income and civil war as evidenc...
We assess risk factors affecting the severity and dynamics of civil wars, departing from analyses fo...
The authors investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theor...
International audienceThere is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but there...
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...
This article revisits the relationship between income per capita and civil conflict. We begin by doc...
Civil war is highly concentrated in poor countries. Nearly all recent quantitative studies find a st...
Most nations have experienced an internal armed conflict since 1960. The past decade has witnessed a...
This article summarizes an empirical investigation of the link between poverty and the incidence of ...
Previous research has interpreted the correlation between per capita income and civil war as evidenc...
Low level of GDP per capita is a robust and widely applied predictor of civil war. Yet, GDP is a cru...
Civil wars are intricate social, political and psychological phenomena. However, economics can offer...
There is a growing body of research that highlights the association between economic conditions and ...
Economists and political scientists have argued that differences in the risk of civil conflict acros...
This paper establishes and explores the implications of a somewhat surprising empirical finding. Alt...
Previous research has interpreted the correlation between per capita income and civil war as evidenc...
We assess risk factors affecting the severity and dynamics of civil wars, departing from analyses fo...
The authors investigate whether civil wars have economic causes. The model is based on utility theor...
International audienceThere is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but there...
Common political economy models point to rationalist motives for engaging in conflict but say little...