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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter November 30, 2019

Regional Inequality and Internal Conflict

  • Christian Lessmann
From the journal German Economic Review

Abstract

This paper studies the influence of regional inequality within countries on internal conflicts. Regional inequalities are measured by the population-weighted coefficient of variation of regional GDP per capita. As the main innovation, I use a panel dataset of country-level regional inequalities, which covers 56 countries (835 subnational regions) between 1980 and 2009. I also consider a broader cross section dataset for the year 2005, which covers 110 countries (1569 subnational regions). Conflict is measured by the incidence of civil war (UCDP/PRIO data) and a risk measure of internal conflict (war, terrorism and riots) provided by the PRS Group’s International Country Risk Guide. Logit estimations are employed as well as OLS fixed effects panel regressions. I find that regional inequalities increase the risk of internal conflict.

Published Online: 2019-11-30
Published in Print: 2016-05-01

© 2019 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

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