GOVERNMENT BUDGET DEFICITS, DEFENCE EXPENDITURE AND INCOME DISTRIBUTION: THE CASE OF TURKEY
Onur Ozsoy
Defence and Peace Economics, 2008, vol. 19, issue 1, 61-75
Abstract:
This paper analyzes the relationship between government budget deficits, defence expenditure and income redistribution among different social-income groups in Turkey for the period 1965-2003. The analysis was based on a five-equation vector auto regressive (VAR) model and impulse response functions (IRFs) derived from the VAR model. The study finds that the deficit as a percentage of GNP has a negative and significant impact on transfer payments as a percentage of GNP. The IRFs indicate that shocks to deficit expenditures as a percentage of GNP (DEFGNP) have statistically significant impacts on defence spending as a percentage of GNP (DSGNP), educational expenditures as a percentage of GNP (EDGNP), health expenditures as a percentage of GNP (HEGNP), and transfer payments as a percentage of GNP (TPGNP). The results derived from this study also indicate that there is a positive and significant relationship between defence spending as a percentage of GNP and deficits as a percentage of GNP. Therefore, defence spending is viewed as a tool for transferring income among different social-income groups and across generations in Turkey for the period 1965-2004. As a result of this, the government can use deficit and defence spending as one of the major instruments to transfer income among different social-income groups and across generations in Turkey.
Keywords: Budget deficits; Defence expenditure; Income transfers; VAR models; Impulse response functions (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008
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DOI: 10.1080/10242690701347689
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