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~institution:"International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium - IATRC"
~subject:"by adding firms"
~subject:"such as opportunity costs or a grievance-based mechanism. The data show that increases in investment predict increases in government attacks"
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by adding firms
such as opportunity costs or a grievance-based mechanism. The data show that increases in investment predict increases in government attacks
Public Economics
5
International Relations/Trade
4
International Development
2
2000) but not greedy governments. Yet capturing tax revenue might motivate governments to control territory
1
Agricultural and Food Policy
1
Agriculture
1
Cluster analysis
1
Community/Rural/Urban Development
1
Demand and Price Analysis
1
Firm heterogeneity
1
Food Security and Poverty
1
Productivity
1
Rural development policies
1
Sub-Saharan Africa
1
Supply Manage- ment
1
The literature relating economic activity to political violence has greedy rebels (Collier
1
Trade liberalization
1
additionality
1
and weigh against a dominant role for other mechanisms linking investment and violence
1
as well as increases in rebel attacks. The “tax capture” response reverses in the following year.
1
crowding out
1
deadweight loss
1
extortionary violence by rebels in response to investment) to the interplay of government
1
generating testable implications. Necessary conditions for predation are sufficient to imply “tax capture” (i.e.
1
investment
1
investment subsidy
1
just as capturing extortion revenues motivates rebels. Panel data on political violence in the Philippines distinguish government from rebel attacks
1
market integration
1
missing data
1
propensity score matching
1
rebels and civilians
1
subsidy leverage
1
substitution effects
1
taxation and predation (i.e.
1
these results are consistent with tax capture and predation
1
violence by government in response to investment.) In the context of the expanded model
1
wheat markets
1
which we link to private investment across 70 provinces. To formally explore these data we expand an established theory of asymmetric substate conflict –the “information-centric” model
1
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Berman, Eli
1
Felter, Joseph
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Kapstein, Ethan
1
Troland, Erin
1
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International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium - IATRC
Published in...
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Proceedings Issues, 2014: Food, Resources and Conflict, December 7-9, 2014, San Diego, California
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Predation, Taxation, Investment, and Violence: Evidence from the Philippines
Berman, Eli
;
Felter, Joseph
;
Kapstein, Ethan
;
Troland, Erin
-
International Agricultural Trade Research Consortium - IATRC
-
2014
Persistent link: https://www.econbiz.de/10011167764
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