Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries

The objective of the study is to examine the relationship between military expenditures and unemployment rate in the panel of selected SAARC countries namely India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka over the period ranging from 1990 to 2013. In particular, the study used multivariate framework to examin...

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Main Authors: Azam, M., Khan, F., Zaman, K., Rasli, A. M.
Format: Article
Published: Springer Netherlands 2016
Subjects:
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author Azam, M.
Khan, F.
Zaman, K.
Rasli, A. M.
author_facet Azam, M.
Khan, F.
Zaman, K.
Rasli, A. M.
author_sort Azam, M.
collection ePrints
description The objective of the study is to examine the relationship between military expenditures and unemployment rate in the panel of selected SAARC countries namely India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka over the period ranging from 1990 to 2013. In particular, the study used multivariate framework to examine the long-run relationship between military expenditures and unemployment rate by taking into account the effect of macroeconomic variables namely energy consumption, GDP per capita, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) net inflows and population growth rate. The empirical results show that all the variables exhibit non-stationary behavior and have long-run relationships between them. The results of panel DOLS show that military expenditures favor the employment rate in the SAARC region, as the estimated coefficient of military expenditure has a negative and more elastic relationship with the unemployment rate. Other factors i.e., energy consumption, GDP per capita and incoming FDI significantly decreases the unemployment rate in the SAARC region. However, population growth rate does not exhibit significant association with the unemployment rate during the period under the study. In a second regression apparatus, energy consumption, and GDP per capita significantly decrease the military spending, however, population growth rate significantly increases the military expenditures in the region. The results of causality indicate that there is an inverse causality between energy consumption, GDP per capita and population growth rate with the unemployment rate, while there is no significant causation between military spending and the rest of the variables in the short-run. In the long-run, there is a significant causation between the variables with the exception of population growth rate in SAARC region. These results are valuable both for policy makers and government officials to formulate their strategic polices for SAARC countries.
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spelling utm.eprints-723542017-11-20T08:23:44Z http://eprints.utm.my/72354/ Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries Azam, M. Khan, F. Zaman, K. Rasli, A. M. HD28 Management. Industrial Management The objective of the study is to examine the relationship between military expenditures and unemployment rate in the panel of selected SAARC countries namely India, Nepal, Pakistan and Sri Lanka over the period ranging from 1990 to 2013. In particular, the study used multivariate framework to examine the long-run relationship between military expenditures and unemployment rate by taking into account the effect of macroeconomic variables namely energy consumption, GDP per capita, Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) net inflows and population growth rate. The empirical results show that all the variables exhibit non-stationary behavior and have long-run relationships between them. The results of panel DOLS show that military expenditures favor the employment rate in the SAARC region, as the estimated coefficient of military expenditure has a negative and more elastic relationship with the unemployment rate. Other factors i.e., energy consumption, GDP per capita and incoming FDI significantly decreases the unemployment rate in the SAARC region. However, population growth rate does not exhibit significant association with the unemployment rate during the period under the study. In a second regression apparatus, energy consumption, and GDP per capita significantly decrease the military spending, however, population growth rate significantly increases the military expenditures in the region. The results of causality indicate that there is an inverse causality between energy consumption, GDP per capita and population growth rate with the unemployment rate, while there is no significant causation between military spending and the rest of the variables in the short-run. In the long-run, there is a significant causation between the variables with the exception of population growth rate in SAARC region. These results are valuable both for policy makers and government officials to formulate their strategic polices for SAARC countries. Springer Netherlands 2016 Article PeerReviewed Azam, M. and Khan, F. and Zaman, K. and Rasli, A. M. (2016) Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries. Social Indicators Research, 127 (3). pp. 1103-1117. ISSN 0303-8300 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84930358097&doi=10.1007%2fs11205-015-0993-7&partnerID=40&md5=08b6242a92bf1fda7bf1c2c80c7324d6
spellingShingle HD28 Management. Industrial Management
Azam, M.
Khan, F.
Zaman, K.
Rasli, A. M.
Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title_full Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title_fullStr Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title_full_unstemmed Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title_short Military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected South Asian countries
title_sort military expenditures and unemployment nexus for selected south asian countries
topic HD28 Management. Industrial Management
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AT khanf militaryexpendituresandunemploymentnexusforselectedsouthasiancountries
AT zamank militaryexpendituresandunemploymentnexusforselectedsouthasiancountries
AT rasliam militaryexpendituresandunemploymentnexusforselectedsouthasiancountries