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Minority Status and Investment: Evidence from Natural and Lab Experiments in Bosnia and Herzegovina1

Author

Listed:
  • Vera Mironova

    (University of Maryland)

  • Egor Lazarev

    (Columbia University)

Abstract

This study explores how minority status influences individual decisions about investment in a post-conflict society. The study is based on multiple sources of evidence from Bosnia and Herzegovina. First, we exploit an exogenous imposition of minority and majority positions by an asif random adjustment of an administrative boundary and analyze household and business surveys. Second, we run a �lab-in-the field� experiment. The analysis shows that both actual and experimentally induced minority statuses are associated with lower levels of investment. Evidence suggests the perception of discrimination by the government, and not actual discrimination, as the plausible cause of such behavior. Several implications follow: emergence and persistence of segregated ethnic businesses, underinvestment and a basis for horizontal inter-group inequality that could increase the probability of a conflict.

Suggested Citation

  • Vera Mironova & Egor Lazarev, 2013. "Minority Status and Investment: Evidence from Natural and Lab Experiments in Bosnia and Herzegovina1," HiCN Working Papers 162, Households in Conflict Network.
  • Handle: RePEc:hic:wpaper:162
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