On the Asymmetry between Conflict and Development: Evidence from Sustainable Development Goals

This paper investigates the relationship between (internal) armed conflict and sustainable development. Using annual panel data on 192 countries from 2000 to 2024, we employ a variety of econometric techniques to trace the impulse responses between conflict fatalities and Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) performance in both directions. Results reveal a striking asymmetry: conflict shocks produce long-lasting adverse effects on SDG performance, while SDG performance shocks exert only transient effects on conflict intensity. This asymmetry persists across external and major conflict episodes, and is robust to alternative identification strategies. Our findings indicate that sustainable development is fundamentally contingent on prior achievement of peace.
Citer

Arezki R., Nguyen H. (2026) “On the Asymmetry between Conflict and Development: Evidence from Sustainable Development Goals”, Ferdi Document de travail P366, février.