Governments can finance the higher military spending associated with interstate war through a combination of cutting non-military spending, imposing higher taxes, borrowing, and adopting an inflationary monetary policy. We argue that the incentives of survival-motivated leaders influence the strategies governments use to fund their war efforts and that regime type conditions the use of some finance strategies. Consistent with our expectations, we find that fighting an interstate war is associated with greater reductions in non-military spending in dictatorships than in democracies and that contemporary democracies and dictatorships largely have avoided financing their wars through tax increases and inflation. We find little support for th...
Sovereign borrowing often pays for the costs of war. This borrowing, coupled with war's economic dis...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
The article builds a simple model to investigate how different types of armed conflict shape fiscal ...
What explains the variation in how states pay for war? Leaders must choose between four primary mean...
What explains the variation in how states pay for war? Leaders must choose between four primary mean...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
How does the way states finance wars affect public support for conflict? Most existing research has ...
One of the most striking institutional differences across countries is the extent to which their mil...
This dissertation explores the critical importance of domestic economic inequality, an understudied ...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
What determines when states adopt war taxes to finance the cost of conflict? We address this questio...
While the factors affecting the initiation of war have been extensively studied, the factors that de...
With access to inexpensive credit, states can finance wars without overburdening their constituents,...
Changes in relative military power in the international system are seen as an impediment to peace. T...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
Sovereign borrowing often pays for the costs of war. This borrowing, coupled with war's economic dis...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
The article builds a simple model to investigate how different types of armed conflict shape fiscal ...
What explains the variation in how states pay for war? Leaders must choose between four primary mean...
What explains the variation in how states pay for war? Leaders must choose between four primary mean...
Democracies are less likely to fight wars with each other. They are also more likely to prevail in w...
How does the way states finance wars affect public support for conflict? Most existing research has ...
One of the most striking institutional differences across countries is the extent to which their mil...
This dissertation explores the critical importance of domestic economic inequality, an understudied ...
How do nation-states' political institutions affect the relations between states? This article addre...
What determines when states adopt war taxes to finance the cost of conflict? We address this questio...
While the factors affecting the initiation of war have been extensively studied, the factors that de...
With access to inexpensive credit, states can finance wars without overburdening their constituents,...
Changes in relative military power in the international system are seen as an impediment to peace. T...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
Sovereign borrowing often pays for the costs of war. This borrowing, coupled with war's economic dis...
We examine the extent to which wealth, democracy, and/or relative military capabilities contribute t...
The article builds a simple model to investigate how different types of armed conflict shape fiscal ...