Abstract
The fear of exposure to conflict events often triggers changes in the behavior of eco-nomic agents even before/without any manifestation of violence in a given area. It gen-erates a treatment status (exposure to the adverse e˙ects of conflict) that goes beyond violence incidence. This paper develops a new approach to capture such treatment. Violence is modeled as a space-time stochastic process with an unknown underlying distribution that is backed out of the observed pattern of conflict events. A new risk measure is built from this density and used to evaluate the impact of conflict on child health using data from Ivory Coast and Uganda. The empirical evidence suggests that conflict is a local public bad, with cohorts of children exposed to high risk of violence equally su˙ering major health setbacks even when this risk does not materialize in violent events around them.
Keywords
Conflict; Insecurity; Kernel Density Estimation; Child Health;
JEL codes
- C1: Econometric and Statistical Methods and Methodology: General
- O12: Microeconomic Analyses of Economic Development
- J13: Fertility • Family Planning • Child Care • Children • Youth
- I12: Health Production
Replaces
Augustin Tapsoba, “The Cost of Fear: Impact of Violence Risk on Child Health During Conflict”, TSE Working Paper, n. 20-1127, July 2020, revised August 2022.
Reference
Augustin Tapsoba, “The Cost of Fear: Impact of Violence Risk on Child Health During Conflict”, Journal of Development Economics, vol. 160, n. 102975, January 2023.
Published in
Journal of Development Economics, vol. 160, n. 102975, January 2023