Commodity Conflict


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Commodities of War


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The War in Ukraine


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Global commodity markets have undergone significant turmoil since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. In the midst of this situation, Russia invaded Ukraine, sending prices skyrocketing. In the two years since this conflict began, the question has become: how has the Russia-Ukraine war impacted commodities long-term, and can those impacts have predictive value for future crises? This paper answers this question through a quantitative analysis of key exports, comparing those of the impacted country to global values, in particular those of price and lead time. Supplemental analysis of other crises since 2000 provide additional data points to determine how much a commodity's price increases in the global market due to the extent a country is a significant exporter of that particular commodity. The resulting regression model is then used to estimate the price increase of selected exports in a hypothetical China-Taiwan conflict. The findings indicate that commodities heavily produced in Ukraine and Russia have had significant price spikes but are dependent on the commodity and overall industry. Commodities that are more dependent on a particular country for production do not exhibit greater price increases than those that are not as dependent due to external market forces. A country's strength in exports only accounts for twenty percent of price increases. Yet despite this limitation, these variables provide a method to predict price changes in the face of mounting natural disasters and political conflicts that threaten global commodity markets.







Economic Shocks and Conflict


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Higher national incomes are correlated with lower political instability. We test three theories linking income to conflict using a new database of export price shocks. Price shocks have no effect on new conflicts, even large shocks in high-risk nations. Rising prices, however, lead to shorter, less intense wars. This evidence contradicts the theory that rising state revenues incentivize attempts at capture, but accords with two theories: that rising revenues improve state counter-insurgency capacity and reduce individual incentives to fight in existing conflicts. Conflict onset and continuation follow different processes. Ignoring this time dependence generates mistaken conclusions about income and instability.




Markets and Conflict


Book Description

Markets and Conflict: Economics of War and Peace explores the causes, impacts, and linkages of contemporary geopolitics, markets, and conflict along with their economic impacts on all stakeholders. It compiles the most current research and insights about market behaviours during conflicts of different types and severity, detailing how markets actually respond and what readers can do to implement a proactive early-response strategy. Today’s international “order” is one characterized by instability and pervasive danger. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, escalating tension over the status of Taiwan, frozen and active civil wars across dozens of countries, and continued turmoil in the Middle East, including in Syria, Yemen, and Israel, are only some examples of ongoing or potential conflicts. Major and minor armed conflicts flare up or threaten to do so on a continual basis. Market responses to this instability are often irrational and shortsighted. Fear induces volatility in markets, based on panicked efforts to protect individual interests. Markets and Conflict: Economics of War and Peace presents a comprehensive understanding of conflict and market dynamics to enable market participants to make informed judgments. Additionally, it provides lessons related to macro-level dynamics useful to governments and policy analysts. Compiles and analyzes extant literature on how confl ict and markets interact Offers strategies to ease or prevent the effects of confl ict Utilizes a well-structured, clearly written, comprehensive, multidisciplinary approach Presents self-contained chapters each with conceptual overviews and defi nitions




The Macroeconomic Costs of Conflict


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Macroeconomic costs of conflict are generally very large, with GDP per capita about 28 percent lower ten years after conflict onset. This is overwhelmingly driven by private consumption, which falls by 25 percent ten years after conflict onset. Conflict is also associated with dramatic declines in official trade, with exports (imports) estimated to be 58 (34) percent lower ten years after conflict onset. The onset of conflict often also induces significant refugee outflows to neighboring non-advanced countries in the short run, and relatively small but very persistent refugee outflows to advanced countries over the long run. Finally, we stress that conflict should be defined in terms of the number of people killed relative to the total population. The traditional definition of conflict—based on the absolute number of deaths—skews the sample toward low-intensity conflicts in large countries, thereby understating the negative effects of conflict from a macroeconomic perspective.







Macroeconomic Shocks and Conflict


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Macroeconomic Shocks and Conflict