000 01226cam a2200157 4500
100 1 _aAYDIN Aysegul
245 _aEnforcing openness:
_btrade protectionism and intervention in civil wars/
_cAysegul Aydin
260 _c2021
520 _aGovernments may resort to a wide range of economic policies to generate revenue and compensate certain sectors in civil wars. Such measures block market access and hurt the interests of third-party countries operating in this market, giving the latter an incentive to shape the course of events in the conflict. To empirically demonstrate this argument, I look at changes in tariff rates adopted by civil war governments to restrict international trade during conflict. I find strong empirical evidence that external actors consider economic interventions on behalf of the government to meet the demand for revenue and for a return to more liberal policies.
650 _aOPPORTUNITY COSTS
_xWAR
_xTRADE BARRIERS
650 _aTARIFF RATES
_xCIVIL WAR INTERVENTION
773 _aCivil Wars :
_gVol.23, No.2, June 2021, pp.257-282
598 _aECONOMICS
856 _uhttps://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/13698249.2021.1949813
_zClick here for full text
945 _i66518.1001
_rY
_sY
999 _c40670
_d40670