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What goes up, must come down? The asymmetric effects of economic growth and international threat on military spending
by
Fordham, Benjamin O
, Schilde, Kaija E
, Zielinski, Rosella Cappella
in
Balance of power
/ Budgets
/ Defense spending
/ Economic decline
/ Economic growth
/ International comparisons
/ Military policy
/ National security
/ Policy making
/ Recessions
/ Threats
/ Variables
/ War
/ World War II
2017
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What goes up, must come down? The asymmetric effects of economic growth and international threat on military spending
by
Fordham, Benjamin O
, Schilde, Kaija E
, Zielinski, Rosella Cappella
in
Balance of power
/ Budgets
/ Defense spending
/ Economic decline
/ Economic growth
/ International comparisons
/ Military policy
/ National security
/ Policy making
/ Recessions
/ Threats
/ Variables
/ War
/ World War II
2017
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Do you wish to request the book?
What goes up, must come down? The asymmetric effects of economic growth and international threat on military spending
by
Fordham, Benjamin O
, Schilde, Kaija E
, Zielinski, Rosella Cappella
in
Balance of power
/ Budgets
/ Defense spending
/ Economic decline
/ Economic growth
/ International comparisons
/ Military policy
/ National security
/ Policy making
/ Recessions
/ Threats
/ Variables
/ War
/ World War II
2017
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What goes up, must come down? The asymmetric effects of economic growth and international threat on military spending
Journal Article
What goes up, must come down? The asymmetric effects of economic growth and international threat on military spending
2017
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Overview
Do considerations that cause military spending increases symmetrically cause spending cuts? Models of military spending that estimate a single effect for major independent variables implicitly assume that this is the case. In reality, the mechanisms that cause military spending increases do not always imply symmetrical cuts, and vice versa. This article examines two considerations widely held to influence military spending: economic growth and international threats. In both cases, there are reasons to suspect asymmetric effects on military spending. While recessions always create pressure for cuts in military spending, which frequently constitutes a substantial share of national budgets, economic growth does not necessarily imply a symmetric need for spending increases. Similarly, while national security policymakers, including the military, are likely to call for spending increases when international threats worsen, they have self-interested reasons to minimize the budgetary implications of declining threats. A cross-national analysis of military spending since World War II shows that economic decline has a larger impact on military spending than economic growth. In regards to international threat, the findings are more complex. There is no evidence that international threat is related to changes in military spending in the short run, and little evidence of a long-run relationship. The threat variables appear to account for cross-sectional variation in military spending but not variation within each state over time. These results suggest military budgets require more time to recover from economic decline than benefit from economic growth as recessions can thus produce long deviations from the equilibrium relationship between the size of the economy and the military budget. This finding in military spending suggests consequences for our understanding of balance of power and power transitions.
Publisher
Sage Publications, Ltd,SAGE Publications,Sage Publications Ltd
Subject
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