Natural Resources and Ethnic Identification
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Series
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Speaker(s)Mathieu Couttenier (University of Lyon, France)
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FieldEmpirical Microeconomics
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LocationTinbergen Institute Amsterdam, room 1.01
Amsterdam -
Date and time
May 21, 2019
16:00 - 17:15
We document the malleability of ethnic group identification to economic shocks. We combine individual data on ethnic identification from multiple waves of the Afrobarometer surveys with geo-localized information on the contours of ethnic homelands and on the location and intensity of natural resources extraction in Africa. We study how natural resources affect the extent of ethnic (versus national) identification. Our strategy makes use of different dimensions of exposure to natural re-sources: time, spatial proximity, and ethnic proximity. We show that an individual’s ethnic feelings get reinforced when natural resources activity increases in the homeland of his ethnic group. This result holds when controlling for local natural resources, and for individuals leaving outside their ethnic homeland. We then turn to the potential channels explaining this increase in ethnic identification, by estimating the effect of natural resources in the ethnic homeland of an individual on his perceptions of relative deprivation and persecution, economic conditions and trust.
Joint work with Nicolas Berman and Victoire Girard.