Third-World Military Expenditure and Arms Production/Robert E.Looney-Forward.
Material type:
- 355.622
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Normal Collection | Joint Command and Staff College General Stacks | UA17 .W34 1988 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | JCSC005325 | ||
Normal Collection | National Defence College (NDC) Library | 300 | UA17 .W34 1988 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3535/02 | |
Normal Collection | National Defence College (NDC) Library | 300 | UA17 .W34 1988 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3439/02 | |
Normal Collection | National Defence College (NDC) Library | 300 | UA17 .W34 1988 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 3438/02 |
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UA17 .K46 1975 The economics of defence / | UA17 .M35 1989 Third World military expenditure : determinants and implications / | UA17 .M35 1989 Third World military expenditure : determinants and implications / | UA17 .W34 1988 Third-World Military Expenditure and Arms Production/Robert E.Looney-Forward. | UA17 .W59 1979 The economics of Third World military expenditure / | UA23 .B46 Soldiers, statesmen, and cold war crises / | UA23 .C6738 1983 U.S. military power and rapid deployment requirements in the 1980s / |
3 Copies available in shelf 2
Generalizations about the relationship between military spending and economic perofmance in developing countries are difficult to make a net, given the state of research, must be considred quite tentative. If anything, the available literature tends to fall back on the old guns versus butter analogy, stressing the negative economic impacts associated with increased defence expenditures. Without quibbling with this orientation, it is nonethelesss somewhat suprisding that so little analysis has yet been attempted to answer the question: why, if military expenditure does ifcat retard growth, developing countries increase such expenditures even during periods of time when the resulting domestic strains purporteddly undermine social and political stability? This volume is divided into three parts: Part I (Comprising chapters 1-6); Part 2 (Comprasing chapters 7-10 and Part 3 (Chapter II).
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