Description
The world is getting richer, but fragile countries and territories don’t seem to be. By 2015, a few of the poor will live in
these economies, most of that have been or still are affected by civil conflicts. Trading Away from Conflict
finds evidence of an important factor affecting conflict: trade, and in particular, trade policy.
On the one hand, trade brings resources and creates jobs, and in turn, those add to stability. On the other
hand, trade itself is also volatile and can increase the value of predating exportable commodities. This book
tries to help policy makers in fragile countries to use trade to reduce the risk of conflict. To take action, it lays out
a framework for studying the relationship between trade and conflict, reviews previous studies, revisits and
expands the cross-country evidence, and analyzes new country case studies. On the basis of the analysis,
it offers trade-related policy directions to reduce this risk in fragile economies.
The results provide convincing evidence that trade and trade policy have a large affect on the risk and
intensity of conflict. In particular, higher minerals and oil exports raise the risk of conflict because there is a
high incentive to fight over their keep an eye on. This is seen in quite a few countries―and was the case in Nigeria
until the government reached an agreement that directed some resource revenues to militants.
The results in the book also show that trade-related increases in real incomes and employment reduce the
risk and intensity of conflict. A high volume of trade with neighbors is likely to shorten conflicts and make
them less severe. These effects are particularly strong in more ethnically divided and unequal settings, in
countries and territories with a recent history of or ongoing conflict, such as the West Bank and Gaza,
as well as in those with low levels of accountability and transparency.
Trading Away from Conflict will help readers be aware a part of the dynamics of some current conflicts such
as those in Nigeria and the Republic of South Sudan, quantify the effect of more than a few trade shocks on conflict
across and within economies, identify some conditions when this effect is larger, and evaluate measures to
use trade to increase conflict resilience in fragile settings.