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Library The Impact of Violence on Individual Risk Preferences

The Impact of Violence on Individual Risk Preferences

The Impact of Violence on Individual Risk Preferences

Resource information

Date of publication
November 2015
Resource Language
ISBN / Resource ID
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/22862

This study estimates the impact of
Kenya’s post-election violence on individual risk
preferences. Because the crisis interrupted a longitudinal
survey of more than five thousand Kenyan youth, this timing
creates plausibly exogenous variation in exposure to civil
conflict by the time of the survey. The study measures
individual risk preferences using hypothetical lottery
choice questions, which are validated by showing that they
predict migration and entrepreneurship in the cross-section.
The results indicate that the post-election violence sharply
increased individual risk aversion. Immediately after the
crisis, the fraction of subjects who are classified as
either risk neutral or risk loving dropped by roughly 26
percent. The findings remain robust to an IV estimation
strategy that exploits random assignment of respondents to
waves of surveying.

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Authors and Publishers

Author(s), editor(s), contributor(s)

Jakiela, Pamela
Ozier, Owen

Publisher(s)
Data Provider