Do the psychological impacts of war cause poverty?: Evidence from Mozambique


Autoria(s): Madaleno, Margarida Nunes de Abreu
Contribuinte(s)

Vicente, Pedro

Data(s)

05/06/2015

05/06/2015

01/01/2015

Resumo

This paper evaluates the extent to which war-related psychological distress causes poverty. The endogeneous nature of mental distress is addressed by using exposure to the civil war in Mozambique as an instrument. It is found that exposure to war has a significant and positive long-lasting impact on mental distress. Furthermore, the causal impact of war-related psychological distress on income and wealth is shown to be significant, negative, and nonnegligible. One standard deviation increase in mental distress decreases income by half a standard deviation. These findings are robust to alternative specifications, including the use of an alternative database on the incidence of PTSD in Mozambique.

NSBE - UNL

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10362/15091

201476924

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

openAccess

Tipo

masterThesis