Does Scarcity Cause
Conflict
Scarcity is an issue that has been
hotly debated with some claiming that it will be the downfall of democracy and
others stating that human ingenuity will meet any challenge and deny any
downfall. The most correct response to such a debate would be to say that the
effects of scarcity are dependent upon the intensity of the scarcity, the range
of the scarcity (local, regional, global) the market conditions in the area (healthy
or struggling), the availability of substitutes for the scarce commodity,
whether the scarce commodity is renewable or not, the strength of the
government trying to cope with the scarcity, the characteristics of the
populations (cultural traits, demography, religious history, history of
conflicts, list goes on), and no doubt many other factors as well which will
all contribute to what we call the environmental conditions surrounding the
situation.
According
to the Hendrix reading scarcity can increase the likelihood of conflicts
breaking out and he performed a study on rainfall patterns to help provide
support for his theory. In contrast the Theisen reading claimed that civil wars
were not likely to be created by scarcity and that other factors like
characteristics of the government and poverty were more likely the causes of
the conflicts.
I feel
that the problem with using statistical analysis to evaluate the impacts of
scarcity is that it fails to capture the subtle effects scarcity can often
have. Furthermore, it is possible to come to completely different conclusions
simply because scarcity or conflict are defined differently in different
studies or scenarios. If we treat conflict as the incidence of civil war like
Theisen does we will of course see less conflict because it requires a lot of
pressure to create a civil war as opposed to more tame forms of conflict like a
riot, protest, or even domestic violence. Furthermore, if we decide
that every minor deprivation of a commodity constitutes a situation of scarcity
we will overestimate the occurrence of scarcity and it will appear as though
the effects are minor. This can help explain the different conclusions that
Theisen and Hendrix came to as Hendrix looked at smaller conflicts whereas
Theisen looked at civil wars which meant that Hendrix was more likely to find a
correlation than Theisen.
Rather
than relying on statistics to decide how important scarcity is I feel it is better
to rely on a more logical approach that uses intuition, observation, critical
analysis, while avoiding the number games that statistics force us to play. All
statistics are wrong anyway according to both of my stat professors. Let us
consider two examples.
A
person enters a supermarket in the United States and they are out of chocolate
milk (absolute local scarcity). There is a substitute (chocolate soy milk).
There are also abundant other drink options that are cheap and within easy
reach. There is a woman with a grocery basket that has a jug of chocolate milk
(unequal distribution of a scarce resource). The store’s owner is not available
to handle to situation. So what will the person do? Your first thought (I hope)
is it depends on the person. Perhaps the person will offer the woman more money
than the milk is worth to acquire it (economic solution/bargaining). Maybe they
wait till she is preoccupied and snatch it from the cart (non-violent conflict).
The person could just go to another store that has chocolate milk (relocation/displacement).
They could drink something else (substitute). They could also punch the lady in
the face and take the milk (resort to violent conflict). Since we are in the
U.S. it is likely that conflict will not be the chosen solution if the person
is acting rationally (it may be awesome but it is still just chocolate milk)
because there are security cameras that would make it very difficult to escape
legal retribution for initiating the conflict.
A
person enters a supermarket in the United States and they are out of almost
everything and so is every other supermarket (absolute widespread scarcity of all commodities that are necessary for survival). There
is not enough food/water for everyone in the store, substitutes are not available, no
more food/water is going to be delivered in the near future (too long to go without).
There are some people who are leaving the store who have food (unequal
distribution of resources). So what will the person do? The answer is now less
obvious. No doubt you are wondering how this predicament came to be, well do to
climate change (or just very bad luck) a hurricane hit New Orleans (again) and
the levies failed (again) but hurricanes have also simultaneously (within a few
days of each other) devastated other places as well like Miami, New York City,
and Ocean City. Thus, the aid that is available is insufficient because too
many places are in trouble. Thus, the population of New Orleans that failed to
evacuate in time is left with no access to the formal market, and no rule of
law. This changes the equation and leads to a different logical conclusion than
the tamer incidence of scarcity previously discussed. Substitution, bargaining,
and relocation are no longer options because substitutes are unavailable,
resources are too scarce to create a market, and there is nowhere to go that
has more resources. The only options left are deprivation (no access to food,
shelter, water, and security, which could well lead to death), theft which can
provide access to food, and water, and violent conflict which can provide for
all needs (as long as the person is the winner). Furthermore, collective action is impossible because there is
absolute scarcity meaning that if all resources are shared equally everyone
will die from deprivation. Thus, it is likely that many people will be killed
and violent conflict will occur in this situation.
So even
in a Country as wealthy, stable, and democratic as the United States it is not
impossible to think of a scenario where scarcity can create violence. It
depends on the environment which has many aspects, it depends on the person
which in turn depends on many factors, and it depends on the nature of the commodity
that is scarce.
I agree as well. The point that statistics can be manipulated using different definitions of the variables on the same data to get differing results shows that they can lead to logical contradictions, and claims backed by them are made invalid. I think a logical approach is much more desirable, and that Homer-Dixon and Hendrix are right to assert their claims as they make only a few assumptions to get to their answers.
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you both agree with what I have said in my blog. I personally have found it incredibly difficult to get at the nature of scarcity. Odd situations seem to occur where you have abundance that has scarce access or intangible resources like security that are what most would call scarce. Insecurity is basically a scarcity of security. Because of this broad definition it becomes very easy to just point to any shortcoming and declare scarcity! But this causes problems just as readily as limiting it merely to the physical lack of abundance.
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