Oliver Vanden Eynde

Chaired Professor at PSE

CV IN FRENCH CV IN ENGLISH
  • Senior Researcher
  • CNRS
Research themes
  • Human capital and development
  • Political Economy and Institutions
  • Political economy of development
Contact

Address :48 Boulevard Jourdan,
75014 Paris, France

Declaration of interest
See the declaration of interest

Tabs

I’m a researcher (directeur de recherche) at the CNRS and a professor at PSE. I’m also affiliated with the CEPR. My research focuses on violent conflict, political economy, and rural infrastructure development. I’m the deputy head of research and of the UMR (PjSE) at PSE. I’m also the co-director of PSE’s PPD programme and the head of engagement of the RECIPE research programme (CEPR).

Publications

Losing on the Home Front? Battlefield Casualties, Media, and Public Support for Foreign Interventions“, joint with Thiemo Fetzer, Pedro CL Souza, and Austin Wright. (Forthcoming, American Journal of Political Science)

Fiscal Incentives for Conflict: Evidence from India’s Red Corridor” (working paper), joint with Jacob Shapiro, Review of Economics and Statistics (2023), Vol. 105 (1).

Security Transitions” (working paper), joint with Thiemo Fetzer, Pedro CL Souza, and Austin Wright, American Economic Review (2021), Vol.111 (7).

Trickle-down Ethnic Politics: Drunk and Absent in the Kenya Police Force (1957-1970) (working paper), joint with Patrick Kuhn and Alex Moradi, American Economic Journal: Economic Policy (2018).

Targets of violence: Evidence from India’s Naxalite Conflict(working paper), Economic Journal (2018). 

Building connections: Political corruption and road construction in India” (working paper), joint with Jonathan Lehne and Jacob Shapiro, Journal of Development Economics (2018), Vol.131.

Economic determinants of the Maoist Conflict in India, joint with Maitreesh Ghatak, Economic and Political Weekly (2017), Vol.52 (39).

Military service and human capital accumulation: evidence from colonial PunjabJournal of Human Resources (2016), Vol.51 (4). 

Working Papers

 Complementarities in Infrastructure: Evidence from Indian Agriculture“, with Liam Wren-Lewis. (R&R, World Bank Economic Review)

Complementarities between infrastructure projects have been understudied. Our paper examines interactions in the impacts of large-scale road construction, electrification, and mobile phone coverage programs in rural India. We find strong evidence of complementary impacts between roads and electricity on agricultural production: dry season cropping increases significantly when villages receive both, but not when they receive one without the other. These complementarities are associated with a shift of cropping patterns towards market crops and with improved economic conditions.  In contrast, we find no consistent evidence of complementarities for the mobile coverage program. 

Cooperation between National Armies: Evidence from the Sahel borders“, with Marion Richard. (R&R, Journal of Development Economics)

The effectiveness of security operations often depends on cooperation between different national armies. Such cooperation can be particularly important when international borders are porous. In this project, we investigate how the creation of an international armed force that could operate across international borders (the G5-Sahel Joint Force) affected conflict dynamics in the Sahel region. Relying on a regression discontinuity design, we find that the G5 mission lowered the intensity of conflict locally in its zone of operation. Further analysis of geographical conflict propagation patterns indicates that the G5-Sahel force facilitated security operations in border areas.

Team production on the battlefield: Evidence from NATO in Afghanistan“, with Thiemo Fetzer and Austin Wright. (submitted)

Managing military operations across and between teams of partner nations remains a first-order challenge to security and development during conflict. NATO, under the umbrella of  the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF), brought together troops from 28 countries to help enhance security provision in Afghanistan. ISAF units were given responsibility for specific operational units. The assignment of responsibilities to different national armed forces could lead to coordination problems. We explore whether the provision of security is affected by horizontal frictions (when different countries are responsible for different sides of borders) or vertical frictions (when different countries control different levels of the operational hierarchy). We find that both horizontal frictions and vertical frictions reduce military support activities, including aid projects. They are also associated with higher levels of insurgent violence. These findings indicate that misalignment between units within military organizations can undermine the effectiveness of security and development interventions during war, with broader implications for managing complex teams under risk.

From muscle drain to brain gain: the long-term effects of Gurkha recruitment in Nepal“, with François Libois, Ritu Muralidharan, and Juni Singh.

Books

Infrastructures et Développement Rural: L’exemple de l’Inde” (in French), joint with Liam Wren-Lewis. «Collection du Cepremap» n°61 (forthcoming 2023), Editions Rue d’Ulm, Paris.

“L’économie appliquée du développement”, in: Un monde commun. Comprendre le monde pour mieux l’habiter ensemble : les savoirs des humanités et des sciences sociales. 2023, CNRS Editions.

Work in Progress

“Bidding for Roads”, joint with Jonathan Lehne and Jacob Shapiro. 

Policy reports

“Connecting the Red Corridor: Infrastructure Development in Conflict Zones”, joint with Jamie Hansen-Lewis, Jacob Shapiro, and Austin Wright.   
A description of the data we collected is provided in an IGC Working Paper, and our descriptive analysis is summarized in an IGC Policy Brief. 

Research Grants

COOPCONFLICT  (ANR).

 

Teaching

PSE Summer School

Microeconomics, Markets and market failures : theory and public policies (PPD, M1)

Political Economy II (PPD and APE, M2)

Cooperation in conflict zones

International terrorism is often nourished by civil conflicts. This link is one of the main motives for foreign military interventions in distant conflict zones, such as Mali or Afghanistan. The effectiveness of these interventions relies crucially on the cooperation of different actors with diverging interests and incentives. These actors include the civilian population, local government officials, as well as foreign and domestic security forces. My research uses new, granular data on violence in Afghanistan and India to study the cooperation between these actors in conflict zones. As economists specialized in the study civil conflict and security forces,we will use micro-econometric methods to study these interactions.

Our proposal consists of three sub-projects. Each sub-project aims to provide quantitative evidence on how economic interventions and organizational changes can promote effective cooperation in conflict zones. Each sub-project will highlight a different set of actors in the conflict. In a first sub-project, we will study how economic shocks affect civilian cooperation with security forces. Second, we will examine how coordination problems between NATO allies affect security provision. In the third sub-project, we will study the interaction between foreign and domestic security forces, and in particular how Afghanistan’s security transition affected violence outcomes. In addition, we will develop two extension projects. The first one studies how fiscal incentives shape the role of sub-national governments in managing conflicts. The second extension project will focus on public support in troop-sending countries for keeping NATO troops in Afghanistan.

The main contribution of this research proposal is to study the cooperation between actors in conflict zones using recently declassified data sources. The granularity of these new data sources allows for the quantification of empirical relationships and formal tests of research hypotheses. While there is an emerging literature in economics and political science using similar statistical tools, it has paid little attention to the interactions that I propose to study. By shedding new light on how different actors in conflict zones cooperate, my research agenda aims to contribute to better decision-making in these challenging environments.

 

Collaborators

Thiemo Fetzer (University of Warwick)

Jacob N Shapiro (Princeton University)

Pedro CL Souza (University of Warwick)

Austin Wright (University of Chicago)

 

Papers

Security Transitions“, joint with Thiemo Fetzer, Pedro CL Souza, and Austin Wright. American Economic Review, 2021.

Fiscal incentives for conflict“, with Jacob Shapiro. Review of Economics and Statistics, 2021.

Losing on the Home Front? Battlefield Casualties, Media, and Public Support for Foreign Interventions“, joint with Thiemo Fetzer, Pedro CL Souza, and Austin Wright. Working Paper.

Publications HAL

  • Forthcoming : Losing on the home front? Battlefield casualties, media, and public support for foreign interventions Journal article

    How domestic constituents respond to signals of weakness in foreign wars remains an important question in international relations. This paper studies the impact of battlefield casualties and media coverage on public demand for war termination. To identify the effect of troop fatalities, we leverage the timing of survey collection across respondents from nine members of the International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan. Quasi‐experimental evidence demonstrates that battlefield casualties increase the news coverage of Afghanistan and the public demand for withdrawal. Evidence from a survey experiment replicates the main results. To shed light on the media mechanism, we leverage a news pressure design and find that major sporting matches occurring around the time of battlefield casualties drive down subsequent coverage, and significantly weaken the effect of casualties on support for war termination. These results highlight the role that media play in shaping public support for foreign military interventions.

    Review : American Journal of Political Science

    Published in

  • Cooperation between National Armies: Evidence from the Sahel borders Pre-print, Working paper

    The effectiveness of security operations often depends on cooperation between different national armies. Such cooperation can be particularly important when international borders are porous. In this project, we investigate how the creation of an international armed force that could operate across international borders (the G5-Sahel Joint Force) affected conflict dynamics in the Sahel region. Relying on a regression discontinuity design, we find that the G5 mission lowered the intensity of conflict locally in its zone of operation. Further analysis of geographical conflict propagation patterns indicates that the G5-Sahel force facilitated security operations in border areas.

    Published in

  • Losing on the Home Front? Battlefield Casualties, Media, and Public Support for Foreign Interventions Pre-print, Working paper

    How domestic constituents respond to signals of weakness in foreign wars remains an important question in international relations. In this paper, we study the impact of battlefield casualties and media coverage on public demand for war termination. To identify the effect of troop fatalities, we leverage the otherwise exogenous timing of survey collection across 26,776 respondents from nine members of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) in Afghanistan. Quasi-experimental evidence demonstrates that battlefield casualties increase coverage of the Afghan conflict and public demand for withdrawal, with heterogeneous effects consistent with an original theoretical argument. Evidence from a survey experiment replicates the main results. To shed light on the media mechanism, we leverage a news pressure design and find that major sporting matches occurring around the time of battlefield casualties drive down subsequent coverage, and significantly weaken the effect of casualties on support for war termination. These results highlight the crucial role that media play in shaping public support for foreign military interventions.

    Published in

  • Infrastructures et développement rural Books

    Dans les pays du Sud où une grande partie de la population travaille dans l’agriculture, sortir les travailleurs du secteur agricole relativement improductif peut être une clé pour améliorer leur niveau de vie. Cette « transformation structurelle » a caractérisé la trajectoire de développement de presque tous les pays développés. Pour accélérer le processus et empêcher les zones rurales de prendre du retard en termes économiques, les pays investissent souvent massivement dans les infrastructures. De tels projets contribuent-ils à transformer les zones agricoles ? L’analyse s’appuie largement sur le cas de l’Inde. Si les investissements à grande échelle dans les infrastructures rurales, notamment les routes, ont eu des effets positifs, leur impact en termes de bien-être et de consommation est très hétérogène. En particulier, seuls les villages ayant bénéficié à la fois d’infrastructures routières et électriques semblent avoir vu leur consommation par habitant augmenter. Il faudrait donc regrouper les programmes complémentaires et les cibler sur des zones spécifiques pour que les investissements soient efficaces.

    Editors : Rue d'Ulm, Cepremap

    Published in

  • Complementarities in Infrastructure: Evidence from Rural India Pre-print, Working paper

    Complementarities between infrastructure projects have been understudied. This paper examines interactions in the impacts of large-scale road construction, electrification, and mobile phone coverage programs in rural India. We find strong evidence of complementary impacts between roads and electricity on agricultural production: dry season cropping increases significantly when villages receive both, but not when they receive one without the other. These complementarities are associated with a shift of cropping patterns towards market crops and with improved economic conditions. In contrast, we find no consistent evidence of complementarities for the mobile coverage program.

    Published in

  • Security Transitions Journal article

    How do foreign powers disengage from a conflict? We study this issue by examining the recent, large-scale security transition from international troops to local forces in the ongoing civil conflict in Afghanistan. We construct a new dataset that combines information on this transition process with declassified conflict outcomes and previously unreleased quarterly survey data of residents’ perceptions of local security. Our empirical design leverages the staggered roll-out of the transition, and employs a novel instrumental variables approach to estimate the impact. We find a significant, sharp, and timely decline of insurgent violence in the initial phase: the security transfer to Afghan forces. We find that this is followed by a significant surge in violence in the second phase: the actual physical withdrawal of foreign troops. We argue that this pattern is consistent with a signaling model, in which the insurgents reduce violence strategically to facilitate the foreign military withdrawal to capitalize on the reduced foreign military presence afterward. Our findings clarify the destabilizing consequences of withdrawal in one of the costliest conflicts in modern history, and yield potentially actionable insights for designing future security transitions.

    Review : American Economic Review

    Published in

  • Fiscal Incentives for Conflict: Evidence from India’s Red Corridor Pre-print, Working paper

    Can tax regimes shape the incentives to engage in armed conflict? Indian mining royalties benefit the States, but are set by the central government. India’s Maoist belt is mineral-rich, and States are responsible for counter-insurgency operations. We exploit the introduction of a 10% ad valorem tax on iron ore that increased royalty collections of the affected states by a factor of 10. We find that the royalty hike was followed by a significant intensification of violence in districts with important iron ore deposits. The royalty increase was also followed by an increase in illegal mining activity in iron mines.

    Published in

  • Security Transitions Pre-print, Working paper

    How do foreign powers disengage from a conflict? We study the recent largescale security transition from international troops to local forces in the context of the ongoing civil conflict in Afghanistan. We construct a new dataset that combines information on this transition process with declassified conflict outcomes and previously unreleased quarterly survey data. Our empirical design leverages the staggered roll-out of the transition onset, together with a novel instrumental variables approach to estimate the impact of the two-phase security transition. We find that the initial security transfer to Afghan forces is marked by a significant, sharp and timely decline in insurgent violence. This effect reverses with the actual physical withdrawal of foreign troops. We argue that this pattern is consistent with a signaling model, in which the insurgents reduce violence strategically to facilitate the foreign military withdrawal. Our findings clarify the destabilizing consequences of withdrawal in one of the costliest conflicts in modern history and yield potentially actionable insights for designing future security transitions.

    Published in

  • Trickle-Down ethnic politics: drunk and absent in the Kenya police force (1957-1970) Journal article

    How does ethnic politics affect the state’s ability to provide policing services? Using a panel of administrative personnel data on the full careers of 6,784 police officers, we show how the rise of ethnic politics around Kenya’s independence influenced policemen’s behavior. We find a significant deterioration in discipline after Kenya’s first multiparty election for those police officers of ethnic groups associated with the ruling party. These effects are driven by a behavioral change among these policemen. We find no evidence of favoritism within the police. Instead, our results are consistent with co-ethnic officers experiencing an emboldenment effect. Our findings highlight that the state’s security apparatus, at its most granular level, is not insulated from ethnic politics.

    Review : American Economic Journal: Economic Policy

    Published in