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How Elastic is the Government's Demand for Weapons?

Frank Lichtenberg

No 3025, NBER Working Papers from National Bureau of Economic Research, Inc

Abstract: We attempt to make inferences about the elasticity of the government's demand for specific weapons by analyzing the statistical relationship between quantity and cost revisions across the population of major weapon systems, using data contained in the Pentagon's Selected Acquisition Reports. The cost revisions are due in part to the arrival of technological information generated in the course of research and development. When we standardize the data by program base year, we find that the elasticity of demand is .55, and is significantly different from both zero and unity. Thus, the governments demand for specific weapons is inelastic, but not perfectly inelastic. The estimates also imply that weapons acquisition is characterized by increasing returns: the mean and median values of the elasticity of total cost with respect to quantity are .78 and .72, respectively.

Date: 1989-07
Note: PR
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)

Published as Journal of Public Economics, Vol. 40, pp. 57-78, (1989).

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Related works:
Journal Article: How elastic is the government's demand for weapons? (1989) Downloads
Working Paper: HOW ELASTIC IS THE GOVERNMENT'S DEMAND FOR WEAPONS? (1988)
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