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War, Wealth and the Formation of States * Carles Boix, Bruno Codenotti and Giovanni Resta * Prepared for 2006 IPES Meeting.

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Presentation on theme: "War, Wealth and the Formation of States * Carles Boix, Bruno Codenotti and Giovanni Resta * Prepared for 2006 IPES Meeting."— Presentation transcript:

1 War, Wealth and the Formation of States * Carles Boix, Bruno Codenotti and Giovanni Resta * Prepared for 2006 IPES Meeting.

2 PURPOSE  Examine analytically the dynamics of the formation of state systems.  Preceding literatures: Macrohistorical approaches (Hintze, Tilly): variation explained as a function of coercion and capital; mostly comparative history. Economic models (Alesina): trade integration & public good provision; mostly game theory. Simulation analysis (Beson, Bremer & Mihalka, Cusack & Stoll, Cederman).  Here: Analytical assumptions about rulers’ and states’ behavior; Emphasis on war and on factor endowments; Application of simulations

3 MICRO FOUNDATIONS  Anarchical world.  Rulers (states) maximize net revenue -- to maximize consumption and/or to have enough power to survive.  Although there may be several strategies to maximize revenue (trade, war, etc.), here we restrict the strategy of wealth maximization to territorial expansion.

4 DECISION RULES OF STATE (1)

5 DECISION RULES OF STATE (2)

6 VARIATION IN UNDERLYING PARAMETERS  Shift in Cost Function: In fixed costs – higher starting costs, higher capital/labor ratio In variable costs: change in military technology, change in compliance costs, strength of other rulers.  Shift in Revenue Function Change in underlying wealth Change in tax rate and effectiveness in tax collection Types of taxable assets

7 SIMULATION ENVIRONMENT

8 CHANGES IN VARIABLE COSTS

9 CHANGES IN REVENUE DUE TO POPULATION

10 CHANGES IN REVENUE DUE TO ASSET TYPE

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13 CENTRAL INSIGHTS  The size of states increases (and their number decreases) as war technologies become capital-intensive.  Wealth is a central factor driving state formation. In scarcely populated, technologically underdeveloped areas the number of states remains high. Rulers have little incentive to expand. Unification does not happen.  To explain variance in state size we need to consider the type of wealth of each country. Countries are smaller (larger) in capital-rich (capital-poor) economies.  War does not take place among mobile capital states.  Internalizing the costs of war to rulers (democracy) reduces war and state size.

14 ADVANCING THEORY  The purpose of the paper is to advance research in comparative politics, primarily.  But we are also interested in current IR theory: We suggest a way to endogenize the number of states in the international system:  … where we preserve the assumption of anarchy as the organizing principle & of the search for power as the driving force of all states,  while specifying basic conditions at the international and domestic level that explain a wide variety of outcomes (clusters of peace-keeping nations, periods of war, etc.)


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