The Economic Costs of Civil War: Synthetic Counterfactual Evidence and the Effects of Ethnic Fractionalization
Stefano Costalli (),
Luigi Moretti and
Costantino Pischedda ()
Additional contact information
Stefano Costalli: University of Essex
Costantino Pischedda: Columbia University
No 184, HiCN Working Papers from Households in Conflict Network
Abstract:
There is a consensus that civil wars entail enormous economic costs, but we lack reliable estimates, due to the endogenous relationship between violence and socio-economic conditions. This paper measures the economic consequences of civil wars with the synthetic control method. This allows us to identify appropriate counterfactuals for assessing the national-level economic impact of civil war in a sample of 20 countries. We find that the average annual loss of GDP per capita is 17.5 percent. Moreover, we use our estimates of annual losses to study the determinants of war destructiveness, focusing on the effects of ethnic heterogeneity. Building on an emerging literature on the relationships between ethnicity, trust, economic outcomes, and conflict, we argue that civil war erodes interethnic trust and highly fractionalized societies pay an especially high �price�, as they rely heavily on interethnic business relations. We find a consistent positive effect of ethnic fractionalization economic war-induced loss.
Pages: 54 pages
Date: 2014-09
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-dev, nep-gro and nep-his
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (7)
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https://hicn.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/06/HiCN-WP-184.pdf (application/pdf)
Related works:
Journal Article: The economic costs of civil war (2017) 
Working Paper: The economic costs of civil war: Synthetic counterfactual evidence and the effects of ethnic fractionalization (2017)
Working Paper: The economic costs of civil war: Synthetic counterfactual evidence and the effects of ethnic fractionalization (2017)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:hic:wpaper:184
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