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Arms Sales and Foreign Aid: The German Case Austin Baker Abby Cooner Prof. Vreeland Krogh Honors Seminar
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Research Question German Arms Imports German Foreign Aid Independent Variable Dependent Variable
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Hypothesis If a country imports German arms, they are more likely to receive German foreign aid. How does this make sense?
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Context End of Cold War more open, competitive, less polarized arms market – COCOM – Wassenaar Arrangement – EU Policy ≠ decisions (Davis 2002: 6) “Much of what goes by the name of foreign aid today is in the nature of bribes”
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The Process Foreign Country German Arms Manufacturers Federal Security Council Chancellor Federal Ministry Buys Arms Receives Aid BDSV Export Permits
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Methodology Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) – Arms transfers database OECD Data (1990-2009) Challenge of Endogeneity
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Top German Arms Importers and Aid Recipients Top Ten German Arms Importers* (2006) South Africa528.00 Turkey330.00 Malaysia310.00 India15.00 China14.00 Pakistan12.00 Jordan4.00 Chile1.00 Iran1.00 Albania0.00 *Recognized ODA recipients in 2006, recorded in millions of TIV Top Ten German ODA Recipients* (2006) China473.61 Iraq449.17 Indonesia261.35 Serbia239.25 India232.55 Egypt199.23 Vietnam154.61 Turkey116.77 Tunisia79.05 Philippines69.32 *Recognized ODA recipients in 2006, millions of constant 2011 dollars
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Table 2. Effect of German Arms Imports on Bilateral Aid received from Germany VariableModel 1Model 2Model 3 Value of German Arms Imports0.05**0.06***0.05** (2.39)(3.51)(2.55) Membership on the UNSC1.04*1.18** (1.91)(2.29) U.S. Military Assistance0.09**0.10* (2.37)(1.81) Political regime type0.02 (0.3) Human rights record0.3 (1.38) Pariah state-1.58 (0.96) War-0.52 (0.84) ln(GDP per capita, real)0.8 (0.38) Value of German goods imported by their trade partner0 (1.39) Value of a trade partner’s goods imported by Germany0 (1.6) Number of observations923837922 R-squared0.260.360.27 Notes: All regressions include country and year fixed-effects and regional quartics. Numbers in parentheses are the absolute values of t-statistics. We mark absolute t-statistics with * if p<0.10 (statistical significance at the 10% confidence level); with ** if p<0.05 (statistical significance at the 5% confidence level); and with *** if p<0.01 (statistical significance at the 1% confidence level). Notes: All regressions include country and year fixed-effects and regional quartics.
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Conclusion Import arms receive more aid Positive, statistically significant Causal logic reinforced by data
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