Sinking budgets and ballooning prices: Recent developments connected to military spending
Military spending in the West generally declined after the Cold War. Given the economic pressures that many of these states confronted, they can be said to have experienced a fortuitous conjunction of lessening security demands with stable if not rising pressures to allocate more resources to social purposes. However, with declining financial resources a good part of military capital in these countries was reduced and most of what remains is growing obsolete. The excessive rise in relative prices associated with major military capital items, a rise only partially associated with an increase in real effectiveness, poses a challenge for many of these states if they are to retain their capacity to provide in some meaningful way for their own military defense.
H11 - Structure, Scope, and Performance of Government ; H56 - National Security and War ; D43 - Oligopoly and Other Forms of Market Imperfection ; N40 - Government, War, Law, and Regulation. General, International, or Comparative