Publication | Closed Access
Opium for the Masses? Conflict-Induced Narcotics Production in Afghanistan
54
Citations
72
References
2013
Year
Applied EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentDevelopment EconomicsTradeAgricultural EconomicsInternational ConflictSocial SciencesRising ConflictsGeopolitical ConflictDiplomacyEconomic AnalysisGeopoliticsCivil ConflictPlacebo TestPublic PolicyEconomicsAgricultural ImpactInternational RelationsCommodity FrontierConflict-induced Narcotics ProductionAgrarian Political EconomyConflict StudyBusinessAfghan Opium Production
To explain the rise in Afghan opium production, we explore how rising conflicts change the incentives of farmers. Conflicts make illegal opportunities more profitable as they increase the perceived lawlessness and destroy infrastructure crucial to alternative crops. Exploiting a unique data set, we show that Western hostile casualties, our proxy for conflict, have a strong impact on subsequent local opium production. Using the period after the planting season as a placebo test, we show that conflict has a strong effect before but no effect after planting, indicating causality.
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