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CHANG, TSANGYAO (8) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   140831


causal nexus between military spending and unemployment in the G7: a bootstrap panel causality test / Zhong, Ming; Chang, Tsangyao ; Tang, D P ; Wolde-Rufael, Yemane   Article
Wolde-Rufael, Yemane Article
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Summary/Abstract We revisit the causal relationship between military spending and unemployment in the G7 countries applying a bootstrap panel causality analysis that accounts for both cross-sectional dependence and for heterogeneity across countries. Using per capita real GDP as a controlled variable, we found a unidirectional causality running from military spending to unemployment for Canada, Japan, and the US, one-way causality running from unemployment to military spending for France and Germany, and bidirectional causality for Italy and the UK. The empirical evidence does not seem to provide consistent results regarding the causal relationship between military spending and unemployment in G7 countries.
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2
ID:   129494


Does military spending really matter for economic growth in chi / Chang, Tsangyao; Lee, Chien-Chiang; Hung, Ken; Lee, Kuo-Hao   Journal Article
Lee, Chien-Chiang Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This study revisits the causal linkages between military spending and economic growth in China and G7 countries (i.e. Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the UK, and the USA) by focusing country-specific analysis for the period 1988-2010. The panel causality analysis, which accounts for both cross-country dependency and heterogeneity across countries, is employed in this study. Our results find evidence of the neutrality hypothesis for Italy, France, and Germany, the military spending-growth detriment hypothesis for both Canada and the UK, and one-way Granger causality running from economic growth to military spending for China. Furthermore, we find a feedback between military spending and economic growth in both Japan and the USA. Thus, our results do not support that one size fits all.
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3
ID:   138903


Is there excess liquidity in China? / Liu, Tie Ying; Su, Chi Wei ; Jiang, Xu Zhao ; Chang, Tsangyao   Article
Chang, Tsangyao Article
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Summary/Abstract In this paper, we developed the recursive unit root tests proposed by Phillips et al. (2013) and used them to identify the beginning and the end of potential excess liquidity in the Chinese monetary market during the period from 1992 to 2013. The result indicates that excess liquidity existed from the third quarter of 2002 to 2013. The analysis shows that since 2003, the inflationary pressure of excess liquidity has remained high. We provide evidence supporting the money illusion hypothesis in China. The recursive unit root test is suited to practical implementation with time series and delivers a consistent date-stamping strategy for determining the origination and termination of multiple bubbles. Simulations show that the test significantly improves discriminatory power and leads to distinct power gains.
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4
ID:   139215


Military spending and economic growth in the Middle East countries: bootstrap panel causality test / Pan, Chia-I; Chang, Tsangyao; Wolde-Rufael, Yemane   Article
Wolde-Rufael, Yemane Article
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Summary/Abstract This study revisits the causal relationship between military spending and economic growth in 10 Middle East countries via a panel causality analysis that accounts for cross-sectional dependence and heterogeneity across countries. Our results indicate unidirectional causality from military spending to growth for Turkey; one-way causality from economic growth to military spending for Egypt, Kuwait, Lebanon, and Syria; bidirectional causality for Israel; and no causality in either direction for Jordan, Oman, and Saudi Arabia. The empirical evidence does not provide consistent results regarding the causal relationship between defense expenditure and economic growth in these countries.
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5
ID:   155302


Nexus between military expenditures and economic growth in the BRICS and the US: an empirical note / Zhong, Ming; Chang, Tsangyao; Goswami, Samrat; Gupta, Rangan   Journal Article
Gupta, Rangan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This empirical note re-examines the causal linkages between military expenditures and economic growth for the BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) and that for the USA during the period 1988–2012. Results of Granger causality tests show that military expenditures influence economic growth in the USA, economic growth influences military expenditures in both Brazil and India, a feedback between military expenditures and economic growth in Russia, and no causal relation exists between military expenditures and economic growth in China and South Africa. The findings of this study can provide important policy implications for the BRICS countries and also for the USA.
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6
ID:   127916


Nexus of electricity consumption, economic growth and CO2 emiss / Cowan, Wendy N; Chang, Tsangyao; Lotz, Roula Inglesi; Gupta, Rangan   Journal Article
Gupta, Rangan Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract This study reexamines the causal link between electricity consumption, economic growth and CO2 emissions in the BRICS countries (i.e., Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) for the period 1990-2010, using panel causality analysis, accounting for dependency and heterogeneity across countries. Regarding the electricity-GDP nexus, the empirical results support evidence on the feedback hypothesis for Russia and the conservation hypothesis for South Africa. However, a neutrality hypothesis holds for Brazil, India and China, indicating neither electricity consumption nor economic growth is sensitive to each other in these three countries. Regarding the GDP-CO2 emissions nexus, a feedback hypothesis for Russia, a one-way Granger causality running from GDP to CO2 emissions in South Africa and reverse relationship from CO2 emissions to GDP in Brazil is found. There is no evidence of Granger causality between GDP and CO2 emissions in India and China. Furthermore, electricity consumption is found to Granger cause CO2 emissions in India, while there is no Granger causality between electricity consumption and CO2 emissions in Brazil, Russia, China and South Africa. Therefore, the differing results for the BRICS countries imply that policies cannot be uniformly implemented as they will have different effects in each of the BRICS countries under study.
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7
ID:   115176


Nuclear energy consumption, oil consumption and economic growth: bootstrap panel causality test / Chu, Hsiao-Ping; Chang, Tsangyao   Journal Article
Chu, Hsiao-Ping Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract This study applies bootstrap panel Granger causality to test whether energy consumption promotes economic growth using data from G-6 countries over the period of 1971-2010. Both nuclear and oil consumption data are used in this study. Regarding the nuclear consumption-economic growth nexus, nuclear consumption causes economic growth in Japan, the UK, and the US; economic growth causes nuclear consumption in the US; nuclear consumption and economic growth show no causal relation in Canada, France and Germany. Regarding oil consumption-economic growth nexus, we find that there is one-way causality from economic growth to oil consumption only in the US, and that oil consumption does not Granger cause economic growth in G-6 countries except Germany and Japan. Our results have important policy implications for the G-6 countries within the context of economic development.
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8
ID:   137934


Revisiting the defense–growth nexus in European countries / Chang, Tsangyao; Lee, Chien-Chiang ; Chu, Hsiao-Ping   Article
Lee, Chien-Chiang Article
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Summary/Abstract This study revisits the long run and dynamic causal linkages between defense spending and economic growth in 15 selected European countries for the period 1988–2010 by utilizing recent developments in non-stationary panel data analysis. To this end, the series properties of per capita defense spending, per capita real capital stocks, and per capita real GDP are investigated by the panel unit root tests with and without breaks that support evidence on unit root. The panel cointegration tests with and without breaks are also subsequently employed to investigate whether there exists a long-run equilibrium relationship between these three variables. Finally, our causality analysis from panel vector error-correction model suggests that there is a feedback relation between real capital stock and real GDP in both short and long run, a one-way Granger causality running from real GDP to defense spending in both short and long run, and defense spending only Granger causes real capital stock in the long run.
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