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Oil-dependence and Civil conflict in Nigeria
Aderoju
Oyefusi,
Department of Economics & Statistics, University of Benin
WPS/2007-09
ABSTRACT: This paper examines oil-dependence and civil conflict in Nigeria focusing on the economic dynamics of
resource-induced conflicts. It identifies two dimensions to oil-related civil conflict in the country. The first is
the violent rent-seeking political violence that oil-availability generates between the various ethno-regional
groups; the second is the Niger Delta crisis. The former is linked to excessive government dependence on oil
revenues, an institutionally unstable revenue allocation system, weak political institutional arrangements,
lack of effective agencies of restraints to demand transparency and accountability on the part of political
office holders, failure to translate oil wealth to sustainable growth and increased standard of living for a
larger majority of Nigerians, and a defective property right structure in relation to mineral resource
endowment. Violence in the Niger Delta area is attributed, in the main, to weak institutional arrangements
manifesting in poorly-conceived laws, lack of enforcement, regulatory capture, and a marriage of interest
between the State and oil companies which often encourage the State to use repressive measures against host
communities in cases of disputes. There are also the looting and secession incentives as well as the rentseeking
contests that oil-availability and the allure of ownership creates among local participants. Three
factors (educational attainment, income level and asset possession) consistently explain the propensity to
general violence among individuals in the region in the Ordered and Multinomial regressions on civil
disobedience. The paper concludes with a discussion of some measures that may be used to break the
conflict trap and overcome the corrupting influence of oil-dependence in Nigeria.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Aderoju Oyefusi,
"Oil-dependence and Civil conflict in Nigeria "
(June 1, 2007).
The Centre for the Study of African Economies Working Paper Series.
Working Paper 268.
http://www.bepress.com/csae/paper268
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