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ID167861
Title ProperGrowth and Fiscal Consequences of Terrorism in Nigeria
LanguageENG
AuthorChuku, Chuku ;  Abang, Dominic
Summary / Abstract (Note)In spite of government counter-terrorism expenditure and efforts, the incidence of terrorism in Nigeria appears to be rising. This paper examines the growth and fiscal consequences of terrorism in Nigeria by estimating the terrorism–macroeconomy relation using different measures of terror incidence. The results show that terrorism has an economically and statistically significant negative impact on growth; although this impact is considerably small and short-lived, manifesting only after a lag of about three years. Specifically, the cost of terrorism to Nigeria, in terms of lost GDP per annum, is estimated at 0.82%. Moreover, there is evidence that terrorism leads to the reallocation of economic activity away from private investment spending to government spending; that is, terrorism crowds out investment at a higher rate than its potential to crowd in government spending. Lastly, terrorism alters the composition of government expenditure – with the defence component of government expenditure rising vis-a-vis other expenditure items. The results are robust to allowing for dynamic interactions between terrorism and macroeconomic aggregates.
`In' analytical NoteDefence and Peace Economics Vol. 30, No.5; Sep 2019: p.549-569
Journal SourceDefence and Peace Economics Vol: 30 No 5
Key WordsTerrorism ;  Economic Growth ;  Structural VAR ;  Transfer Functions ;  Counter-Terrorism Expenditure


 
 
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