民族政治的就业效应

Francesco Amodio, Giorgio Chiovelli, Sebastian Hohmann
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引用次数: 14

摘要

本文研究了非洲民主国家种族政治对劳动力市场的影响。我们结合了15个国家、32个议会选举、62个政党、243个民族、2200个选区和40万个人的地理参考数据。我们实施了一个回归不连续设计,比较了在国家议会选举地方代表的边缘与政党有联系的种族的个人。我们发现,在议会中有一名当地的少数民族政治家会增加被雇用的可能性2-3个百分点。我们假设这种效应源于少数民族政治家和传统领导人之间的战略互动,后者保留分配土地和农业工作的权力以换取选票。现有的证据支持这一假设。首先,就业效应集中在具有强大的前殖民制度的民族的历史家园。其次,来自相关种族的个人更有可能从事农业工作,在国家立法正式承认习惯土地所有权的国家也是如此。第三,他们也更有可能将传统领导人视为党派,并主要负责土地分配。有证据表明,民族政治影响着生产资源在各个部门和民族之间的分配。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Employment Effects of Ethnic Politics
This paper studies the labor market consequences of ethnic politics in African democracies. We combine geo-referenced data from 15 countries, 32 parliamentary elections, 62 political parties, 243 ethnic groups, 2,200 electoral constituencies, and 400,000 individuals. We implement a regression discontinuity design that compares individuals from ethnicities connected to parties at the margin of electing a local representative in the national parliament. We find that having a local ethnic politician in parliament increases the likelihood of being employed by 2-3 percentage points. We hypothesize that this effect originates from strategic interactions between ethnic politicians and traditional leaders, the latter retaining the power to allocate land and agricultural jobs in exchange for votes. The available evidence supports this hypothesis. First, the employment effect is concentrated in the historical homelands of ethnicities with strong pre-colonial institutions. Second, individuals from connected ethnicities are more likely to be employed in agriculture, and in those countries where customary land tenure is officially recognized by national legislation. Third, they are also more likely to identify traditional leaders as partisan, and as being mainly responsible for the allocation of land. Evidence shows that ethnic politics shapes the distribution of productive resources across sectors and ethnic groups.
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