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Political Science & International Relations Seminar Series

 

“Land and State Capacity During Civil Wars: How Land-Based Coalitions Undermine Property Taxation in Colombia”

 

Scholars have noted the importance of revenue, especially that from agricultural crops, for the development of state capacity. While existing research has mostly focused on dynamics of violence, we know less about the impact of commodities shocks on a key dimension of state power: property taxation. In this paper, I explore how and why land-based coalitions—alliances between landowners and paramilitaries around the appropriation of land—undermine taxation during civil conflict. Focusing on the expansion of oil palm in Colombia and using a difference-in-differences design, I leverage the international price of oil palm and municipal variation in crop suitability. I find that, in municipalities with higher paramilitary violence and land concentration, the palm shock was associated with lower taxation, outdated cadastral information, and lower land values. This paper underscores the deleterious consequences of land inequality for the state’s extractive capacity even in moments of agricultural abundance.

by

 

Camilo Nieto-Matiz

 

(Tulane University, Center for Inter-American Policy and Research)

  

December 22, 2021

19.00 PM

 

Zoom Link: https://sabanciuniv.zoom.us/j/94969954584

Meeting ID: 949 6995 4584