Abstract

We present a news-based measure of adverse geopolitical events and associated risks. The geopolitical risk (GPR) index spikes around the two world wars, at the beginning of the Korean War, during the Cuban Missile Crisis, and after 9/11. Higher geopolitical risk foreshadows lower investment and employment and is associated with higher disaster probability and larger downside risks. The adverse consequences of the GPR index are driven by both the threat and the realization of adverse geopolitical events. We complement our aggregate measures with industry- and firm-level indicators of geopolitical risk. Investment drops more in industries that are exposed to aggregate geopolitical risk. Higher firm-level geopolitical risk is associated with lower firm-level investment. (JEL C43, E32, F51, F52, G31, H56, N40)

Keywords

GeopoliticsInvestment (military)EconomicsIndex (typography)Political scienceLawPolitics

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Publication Info

Year
2022
Type
article
Volume
112
Issue
4
Pages
1194-1225
Citations
2517
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Dario Caldara, Matteo Iacoviello (2022). Measuring Geopolitical Risk. American Economic Review , 112 (4) , 1194-1225. https://doi.org/10.1257/aer.20191823

Identifiers

DOI
10.1257/aer.20191823

Data Quality

Data completeness: 77%