Çankaya GCRIS Standart veritabanının içerik oluşturulması ve kurulumu Research Ecosystems (https://www.researchecosystems.com) tarafından devam etmektedir. Bu süreçte gördüğünüz verilerde eksikler olabilir.
 

Distinct Asymmetric Effects of Military Spending on Economic Growth for Different Income Groups of Countries

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Ltd

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
İktisat
Bölümümüzün amacı eleştirel bakış açısına sahip, teorik bilgileri pratik uygulamalarla pekiştirerek iktisadi olguları kavrama ve yorumlama kabiliyeti yüksek, yenilikçi, araştırmayı ve analitik düşünmeyi benimseyen, problem çözme yetenekleri gelişmiş, iktisadi olguları sorgulayan ve güncel gelişmeleri takip ederek ileriye dönük projeksiyonlarda bulunabilen iktisatçılar yetiştirme kararlılığıyla, uluslararası standartlarda lisans ve lisansüstü programlar sunmaktadır.

Journal Issue

Events

Abstract

Although possible asymmetries for univariate and multivariate dynamics have been the focus of interest in many areas of economic explorations, it seems that most of the research on military expenditure - economic growth nexus has tended to assume linear relationships. This paper aims to examine possible nonlinearities in military expenditure-economic growth nexus employing data for a sample of 103 countries covering the 1988-2019 period. For this purpose, Panel Smooth Transition Regression, PSTR, models are estimated not only for all countries' sample but also for low income, middle income, and high-income countries' subsamples to reveal possible distinct asymmetric relationships for country groups with different income levels. Empirical results for the whole sample, low income and middle income groups indicate that military expenditure not only governs the regime change, but also low and high levels of military expenditure have distinctive and rising negative effects on economic growth with dissimilar threshold effects. Moreover, empirical findings also indicate that net arms exports govern regime change for high income countries, and as net arms exports rise, the negative impacts of military expenditure on economic growth become deeper.

Description

Keywords

Military Expenditure, Economic Growth, Non-Linear Models, Panel Smooth Transition Regression Model

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

Karadam, Duygu Yolcu; Öcal, Nadir, Yıldırım, Jülide (2021). "Distinct Asymmetric Effects of Military Spending on Economic Growth for Different Income Groups of Countries", Defence and Peace Economics.

WoS Q

Q3

Scopus Q

Q2

Source

Volume

34

Issue

4

Start Page

477

End Page

494