Armed groups

Competition and political violence

authored by
Martin Gassebner, Paul Schaudt, Melvin H.L. Wong
Abstract

We show that the proliferation of armed groups increases the amount of organized political violence. The natural death of a tribal leader provides quasi-experimental variation in the number of armed groups across districts in Pakistan. Employing event study designs and IV-regressions allows us to isolate the effect of the number of armed groups on political violence from locational fundamentals of conflict, e.g., local financing and recruiting opportunities or government capacity. In line with the idea that armed groups compete for resources and supporters, we estimate semi-elasticities of an additional armed group on political violence ranging from 50 to 60%. Introducing a novel proxy for government counter-insurgency efforts enables us to show that this increase is driven by insurgency groups and not the state. Moreover, we show that groups splitting-up compensate for their capacity loss by switching to non-capital intensive attacks.

Organisation(s)
Institute of Macroeconomics
External Organisation(s)
ETH Zurich
Munich Society for the Promotion of Economic Research - CESifo GmbH
University of Bern
Universitat St. Gallen
KfW Development Bank
Type
Article
Journal
Journal of development economics
Volume
162
ISSN
0304-3878
Publication date
05.2023
Publication status
Published
Peer reviewed
Yes
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Development, Economics and Econometrics
Sustainable Development Goals
SDG 16 - Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
Electronic version(s)
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2023.103052 (Access: Open)