Do Modern-Time Wars Make States? Panel Data Evidence

31 Pages Posted: 14 Feb 2014

See all articles by Mauricio Cardenas

Mauricio Cardenas

Fedesarrollo

Marcela Eslava

University of the Andes (CEDE)

Santiago Ramirez

Inter-American Development Bank (IDB)

Date Written: December 4, 2013

Abstract

We re-examine the view that wars make strong states, taking advantage of panel data to address two of the most obvious endogeneity concerns that arise in this context: initial conditions and persistence of state capacity. Our main message is that, in modern times, there is no evidence that wars lead to strong states. In contrast to findings for earlier periods, our results show that external conflicts have displayed a negative correlation with traditional measures of state capacity in recent decades, which becomes insignificant after controlling for initial conditions and the persistence of state capacity. As in previous work, we find a negative capacity-internal conflict correlation, robust to controlling jointly for initial conditions and persistent effects.

Keywords: state capacity, conflict, external war

JEL Classification: O1, H1, H8

Suggested Citation

Cardenas, Mauricio and Eslava, Marcela and Ramirez, Santiago, Do Modern-Time Wars Make States? Panel Data Evidence (December 4, 2013). Documento CEDE No. 2013-58, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2395289 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2395289

Mauricio Cardenas (Contact Author)

Fedesarrollo ( email )

Calle 78 No 9-91
Santafe de Bogota, 75074
Colombia

Marcela Eslava

University of the Andes (CEDE) ( email )

Carrera 1a No. 18A-10
Santafe de Bogota, AA4976
Colombia

Santiago Ramirez

Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) ( email )

1300 New York Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20577
United States

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