Conflict and the composition of economic activity in Afghanistan

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Abstract

Despite informality being the norm in conflict-affected countries, most estimates of the impact of conflict on economic activity rely on formal sector data. Using high-frequency data from Afghanistan, this paper assesses how surges in conflict intensity affect not only the formal sector, but also informal and illicit activities. Nighttime light provides a proxy for aggregate economic activity, mobile phone traffic by registered firms captures fluctuations in formal sector output, and the land surface devoted to poppy cultivation gives a measure of illicit production. The unit of observation is the district and the period of reference is 2012-2016. The results show that an increase in conflict-related casualties has a strong negative impact on formal economic activity in the following quarter and a positive effect on illicit activity after two quarters. The impact on aggregate economic activity is negative, but more muted.

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Galdo, V., Acevedo, G. L., & Rama, M. (2021). Conflict and the composition of economic activity in Afghanistan. IZA Journal of Development and Migration, 12(1), 113–132. https://doi.org/10.2478/izajodm-2021-0010

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