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Wars and capital destruction
Institution:1. CREST-Ensai, ULCO (EQUIPPE), France;2. CIRPEE, Canada;3. Université de Lyon, Université Lumière Lyon 2, CNRS, GATE Lyon St-Etienne, France;1. Plasma and Beam Physics Research Facility, Department of Physics and Materials Science, Faculty of Science, Chiang Mai University, Chiang Mai 50200, Thailand;2. Thailand Center of Excellence in Physics, Commission on Higher Education, 328 Si Ayutthaya Road, Bangkok 10400, Thailand;3. Faculty of Science, Maejo University, Bang Khen, Chiang Mai 50290, Thailand;1. Banco de la República (Central Bank of Colombia), Colombia;2. CEMLA, Mexico;1. Department of Economics, Uppsala University, Uppsala Center for Labor Studies, Box 513, 751 20 Uppsala, Sweden;2. National Institute of Economic Research, 103 62 Stockholm, Sweden;1. Institute for Applied Mathematics, University of Bonn, Endenicher Allee 60, D-53115 Bonn, Germany;2. Finance Center Muenster, University of Muenster, Universitätsstr. 14-16, D-48143 Münster, Germany;3. Department of Mathematics, Saarland University, PO Box 151150, D-66041 Saarbrücken, Germany
Abstract:In this paper, we propose a theoretical framework to investigate the impact of conflicts and wars on key macroeconomic aggregates and welfare. Using a panel data with 9 countries from 1870 onwards, we first show that the consumption-to-output ratio is minimal during WWII for participants. While this can be explained by an increase in public spending in the USA, this cannot be the case in other countries that participated in WWII, as they experience a large fall in output during wartime. To account for this, we build a variation of a Real Business Cycle model first proposed by Hercowitz and Sampson (1991). We extend the initial model to account for specific shocks that destroy private and public capital stocks – as conflicts do – by assuming an (exogenously) time-varying parameter in the law of capital accumulation. In addition, the model imbeds generalized TFP shocks capturing standard technological factors as well as the potential effects of war on the labor force. The model is estimated and used (i) to assess the importance of capital shocks during war episodes, and (ii) to quantify the welfare effects of conflicts. We show that capital shocks are crucial to account for the macroeconomic dynamics of countries that have experienced large war-related destruction, and that the welfare losses from fluctuations can be quite large when considering data samples that include major war episodes.
Keywords:War  Military conflicts  Capital shocks  Real business cycle model  Random coefficient autoregressive model
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