The Guns-Growth Relationship in Israel
- 1 January 2000
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Peace Research
- Vol. 37 (1) , 69-83
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0022343300037001004
Abstract
Israel has one of the highest defense burdens in the world because of security threats and the related need for domestic defense production in the face of uncertain suppliers. Its vote-conscious leaders also react to the domestic political implications of economic performance. Leaders must maintain a healthy growth rate while guarding against inflation. This milieu of sometimes competing phenomena operates in one of the most volatile regions in the world. Prior to the wars in 1967 and 1973, economic growth was healthy and the defense burden was much lower. Economic growth has since rebounded but not to pre-1967 levels. There are competing explanations of the effect of the Israeli defense sector on growth. I consider the determinants and potential effects of Israeli defense spending and then test a three-sector production function model sensitive to the effects of increases in civilian technology and defense and non-defense externalities. The results suggest that when controlling for technological growth, short-term increases in defense spending diminished growth. Non-defense spending fostered growth. I discuss the implications for the much-anticipated `peace dividend' in the Middle East. Based on the empirical findings of the model tested, the policy implication for long-term Israeli defense planning is that eventual savings from peace would be best used for non-defense spending on infrastructure and private investment.Keywords
This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
- Defense Expenditures and Economic Growth in Israel: The Indirect LinkJournal of Peace Research, 1996
- Arab-Israeli Defense Spending and Economic GrowthConflict Management and Peace Science, 1995
- Defense spending, technological change, and economic growth in the United StatesDefence Economics, 1993
- Sizing up the Peace Dividend: Economic Growth and Military Spending in the United States, 1948–1996American Political Science Review, 1992
- Defence expenditures and economic growth: The externality effectDefence Economics, 1991
- Defense Expenditures, Economic Growth, and the “Peace Dividend”American Political Science Review, 1990
- Impact of Arms Production on Income Distribution and Growth in the Third WorldEconomic Development and Cultural Change, 1989
- The Impact Of Arms Production In the Third WorldArmed Forces & Society, 1989
- The Political Economy of Military Spending in IsraelAmerican Political Science Review, 1989
- Foreign Assistance, Investment, and Defense: A Methodological Study with an Application to Israel, 1960-1979Economic Development and Cultural Change, 1987