Journal
JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY
Volume 128, Issue 10, Pages 3940-3997Publisher
UNIV CHICAGO PRESS
DOI: 10.1086/709993
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We study the impact of global food price shocks on local violence across Africa. In food-producing areas, higher prices reduce conflict over the control of territory (factor conflict) and increase conflict over the appropriation of surplus (output conflict). We argue that this difference arises because higher prices increase the opportunity cost of soldiering for producers while simultaneously inducing consumers to appropriate surplus as real wages fall. In areas without crop agriculture, higher prices increase both forms of conflict. We validate our local-level findings on output conflict using survey data. Our findings help reconcile a growing but ambiguous literature on the economic roots of conflict.
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