MILITARY EXPENDITURE, ECONOMIC GROWTH AND STRUCTURAL INSTABILITY: A CASE STUDY OF SOUTH AFRICA

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Taylor & Francis Ltd

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info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess

Abstract

This paper contributes to the growing literature on the milex-growth nexus, by providing a case study of South Africa and considering the possibility of structural breaks by applying newly developed econometric methods. Using full sample bootstrap Granger non-causality tests, no Granger causal link is found between military expenditure and GDP for 1951-2010, but parameter instability tests show the estimated VARs to be unstable. Using a bootstrap rolling window estimation procedure, however, finds evidence of bidirectional Granger causality in various subsamples. This implies standard Granger non-causality tests, which neither account for structural breaks nor time variation may be invalid.

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Military spending, Economic growth, Bootstrap, Time varying causality

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Defence and Peace Economics

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Volume

25

Issue

6

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