Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:2316Hits:21355510Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID153088
Title ProperTrading arms and the demand for military expenditures
Other Title Informationempirical explorations Using New SIPRI-Data
LanguageENG
AuthorThurner, Paul W ;  Pamp, Oliver
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper analyzes the impact of arms imports and exports on national military expenditures. The recent literature on the determinants of military expenditures has mainly focused on countries’ external security environments and their regime type. Based on existing theoretical work, we argue that, in addition to these factors, arms trade flows may have an important role to play. First, we show that rising imports of major conventional weapons do not necessarily translate into higher defense spending. Rather, this relationship depends on political, economic, and contract conditions that influence different choices of financing imports. Therefore, the effect should be very heterogenous. Second, exports may have both a negative or a positive impact depending on regime type and the perceived impact of exports on national security. We empirically test these expectations for 156 countries from 1949 to 2013 using arms trade and new military expenditure data provided by SIPRI. Employing static and dynamic panel data models, we find that the effect of arms imports on defense budgets does indeed differ between regions and time periods. With respect to exports, there is evidence of a strategic substitution effect between military expenditures and arms exports in democratic countries: increases in arms exports are followed by a reduction in military expenditures. For non-democratic societies on the other hand, arms exports do not tend to be associated with lower military spending.
`In' analytical NoteDefence and Peace Economics Vol. 28, No.4; Aug 2017: p.457-472
Journal SourceDefence and Peace Economics Vol: 28 No 4
Key WordsMilitary Expenditure ;  Arms Trade ;  Dynamic Panel Data Models


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text