The effects of military spending has on the economy continues to be a subject of considerable debate, with a lack of consensus in the literature. This paper takes advantage of the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute extended data-set to contribute to the debate using empirical methods made available, or more applicable, by the extra observations. It constructs a large panel of countries for the period 1970–2014 to explore the long-run equilibrium relationship between military spending and economic growth, applies the more flexible pooled mean group estimator, and compares the results with the more restrictive dynamic fixed effect method used in earlier influential studies. It also compares results from different time and countr...
Program year: 1990/1991Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe question of how defense spendi...
The study illuminates the linkages between military spending and economic growth through a cross-cou...
The governments of so called war economies spend extraordinary amounts in the military sector and in...
The effects of military spending has on the economy continues to be a subject of considerable debate...
Until recently, a long-standing, impressively large, and growing literature on the effects of milita...
There is a large literature on the relationship between military spending and economic growth, but t...
This paper examines the impact of military expenditure on economic growth on a large balanced panel,...
Using a sample of 272 meta-observations drawn from 48 primary studies, this paper conducts a meta-an...
An enduring and important debate in economics concerns the effects of military spending on economic ...
While not always a concern for the general economic growth literature, the debate over the effects o...
The objective of this study is investigate the relationship between military expenditure,economic gr...
This paper uses a panel of data 28 countries over the period 1960-1997 to examine the relationship b...
There is much controversy in the literature over whether military spending has a positive or a negat...
This paper has made an attempt to examine relationship between military expenditure and economic gro...
Although the relationship between military expenditures and economic growth is well documented for t...
Program year: 1990/1991Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe question of how defense spendi...
The study illuminates the linkages between military spending and economic growth through a cross-cou...
The governments of so called war economies spend extraordinary amounts in the military sector and in...
The effects of military spending has on the economy continues to be a subject of considerable debate...
Until recently, a long-standing, impressively large, and growing literature on the effects of milita...
There is a large literature on the relationship between military spending and economic growth, but t...
This paper examines the impact of military expenditure on economic growth on a large balanced panel,...
Using a sample of 272 meta-observations drawn from 48 primary studies, this paper conducts a meta-an...
An enduring and important debate in economics concerns the effects of military spending on economic ...
While not always a concern for the general economic growth literature, the debate over the effects o...
The objective of this study is investigate the relationship between military expenditure,economic gr...
This paper uses a panel of data 28 countries over the period 1960-1997 to examine the relationship b...
There is much controversy in the literature over whether military spending has a positive or a negat...
This paper has made an attempt to examine relationship between military expenditure and economic gro...
Although the relationship between military expenditures and economic growth is well documented for t...
Program year: 1990/1991Digitized from print original stored in HDRThe question of how defense spendi...
The study illuminates the linkages between military spending and economic growth through a cross-cou...
The governments of so called war economies spend extraordinary amounts in the military sector and in...