Climate change and the opportunity cost of conflict
journal contribution
posted on 2020-11-17, 00:00authored byDavid N. Dralle, Diogo BolsterDiogo Bolster, Kevin R. Roche, Marc F. Muller, Muller-Itten, Michele
A growing empirical literature associates climate anomalies with increased risk of violent conflict. This association has been portrayed as a bellwether of future societal instability as the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events are predicted to increase. This paper investigates the theoretical foundation of this claim. A seminal microeconomic model of opportunity costs-a mechanism often thought to drive climate-conflict relationships- is extended by considering realistic changes in the distribution of climate-dependent agricultural income. Results advise caution in using empirical associations between short-run climate anomalies and conflicts to predict the effect of sustained shifts in climate regimes: Although war occurs in bad years, conflict may decrease if agents expect more frequent bad years. Theory suggests a nonmonotonic relation between climate variability and conflict that emerges as agents adapt and adjust their behavior to the new income distribution. We identify 3 measurable statistics of the income distribution that are each unambiguously associated with conflict likelihood. Jointly, these statistics offer a unique signature to distinguish opportunity costs from competing mechanisms that may relate climate anomalies to conflict.
History
Date Created
2020-01-28
Date Modified
2020-11-17
Language
English
Rights Statement
All rights reserved.
Publisher
Proceedings Of The National Academy Of Sciences Of The United States Of America