Is Happiness Really a Warm Gun? The Consequences of U.S. Weapons Sales for Political Violence
Arvind Magesan and
Eik Swee
No 2015-09, Working Papers from Department of Economics, University of Calgary
Abstract:
We exploit exogenous shifts in the cost of purchasing commercial weapons from the U.S. to uncover the causal effect of U.S. weapons purchases on political violence. We find that weapons purchases reduce the likelihood of political repression but increase the likelihood of onset of civil war in purchasing countries. The results suggest that state investment in military capability incites civil war in countries where state repression of an aggrieved opposition would have otherwise prevailed.
Date: 2015-06-25
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