Title: Military expenditures and Growth
1Military expenditures and Growth
- Davut Taser-02010606
- Armagan Çetin-02010775
2Outline
- The Methods
- What is growth?
- Growth rate of countries
- Military expendtirues?What it means for countries
- Results of some articles
3The Methods
- We look to the literature and access some
articles which was examined to relationship btw
growth and military expenditures - We collect some data from WB,IMF,SIPRI
- We compare countries by military expenditures and
growth rates - We get some results about our topic
4What is growth?
- Increase of per capita gross domestic product
(GDP) - Is primarily driven by improvements in
productivity - Economic growth long run short-run variation
of economic growth is termed the business cycle
5Growth rates of countries
6Military Expenditures
- Share of military expenditures in GDP
Tunisia 1,3
Angola 4,2
Botswana 3
Burkina Faso 1,2
Cameroon 1,6
Cape Verde 0,5
Central African Rep. 1,8
Chad 6,2
Canada 1,5
USA 4,7
Jamaica 0,9
Mexico 0,5
Argentina 1
Bolivia 2
Brazil 1,6
Chile 3,5
Germany 1,4
Denmark 1,4
Estonia 2,3
Finland 1,5
Netherlands 1,5
Norway 1,6
Poland 1,8
Portugal 2,1
Turkey 2,7
UK 2,7
Saudi Arabia 11,2
Syria 4
UAE 7,3
Source SIPRI
7(No Transcript)
8What does military expenditures mean for
countries?
- personnel
- all expenditures on current personnel, military
and civil - retirement pensions of military personnel
- social services for personnel and their families
- operations and maintenance
- procurement
- military research and development
- military construction
- military aid (in the military expenditures of the
donor country)
9Military Expenditure and Growth in Less Developed
Countiers by Saadet Deger and Ron Smith (1983)
- A model to examine the interaction of military
expenditure, savings, and growth - Cross-sectional data for 50 LDCs
- Military expenditure had a small positive effect
on growth through modernization effects and
larger negative effects through savings
10Defense Spending and Economic Growth in LDCs -
Lisa M.Grobar and Richard C. Porter (1989)
- most important negative effect is that higher
military spending reduces national saving rates,
thereby reducing the rate of capital accumulation
- The existence of positive effects of military
spending on econoic growth, still cannot be
ruled out - Depend how the expenditures are allocated across
labor, domestic capital, and important costs
11Military Expenditure,government size and
economics Growth in the Middle East in the Period
1973-85 by Mikael Linden
- The result of article indicate that military
expenditures have a negative effect on GNP
growth. - However,capital formation and high oil prices
make it possible for these countries to sustain
positive GNP effect.
12Defense Expenditures and Economic Growth in
Developing CountriesP.C.Federiksen-Robert
E.Looney
- The article shows that there is strong
relationship between growth rate and
mil.expenditures for developed countries. - But,there is negative relationship for less
developed countries
13Military Expenditure and Economic Growth in
Greece 1960-90Nicholas Antonakis
- For Greece,mil.expenditure may effect economic
growth through 3 mechanism
a)the whole host of direct and indirect spinoffs
b)the reallocation
of resources
c)the creation of new
resources
14Defense Expenditures,Economic Growth and the
Peace DividendAlex Mintz and Chi Huang
- Article examine USA economy and mil.expenditures
- In the long run lower military spending
encourages investments which in turn promotes
economic growth
15World Defense Expenditures byEmile Benoit,Harold
Lubell,Sylvia Schuman
- According to article,if one country increases its
military expenditure and other country who has
different ideology also increases its
mil.expenditures. - For instance USA and SSCR (former Russia)
16conclusion
All in all, as you see, researches that has done
to investigate growth and military expenditures
is controversy among countries.It can vary with
different situation.