ID | 171018 |
Title Proper | The Defense–growth nexus |
Other Title Information | a review of time series methods and empirical results |
Language | ENG |
Author | Emmanouilidis, Kyriakos ; Karpetis, Christos |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | A great part of the defense literature is focused on the interaction between military spending and economic activity. To investigate this interrelationship, researchers have applied a wide variety of methodologies with totally different assumptions and statistical properties. Until today, however, no detailed examination of the sensitivity of empirical results to the various statistical methods has been provided in the literature. The present paper attempts to fill this gap by providing, firstly, a review of the majority of the time series methodologies used in the defense–growth literature and, secondly, an econometric application using data of the U.S. economy over the period 1961–2015 in order to establish empirically the association between econometric procedures and empirical results. The empirical findings of the conducted analysis suggest that statistical methods can indeed become a significant source of variation in the investigation of the defense–growth nexus. |
`In' analytical Note | Defence and Peace Economics Vol. 31, No.1, Jan 2020; p 86-104 |
Journal Source | Defence and Peace Economics Vol: 31 No 1 |
Key Words | Economic Growth ; Defense Spending ; Time Series ; Literature Review ; H56 ; JEL Classifications ; O23 ; C01 |