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Trade with enemy: Economic interdependence and stability under anarchy

Authors
Choi, Gyoung-GyuKim, Jeong-Yoo
Issue Date
Jul-2021
Publisher
WILEY
Keywords
contest; defense economics; guns and butter; international security; power index; trade with enemy
Citation
MANCHESTER SCHOOL, v.89, no.4, pp 353 - 366
Pages
14
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
MANCHESTER SCHOOL
Volume
89
Number
4
Start Page
353
End Page
366
URI
https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/20885
DOI
10.1111/manc.12365
ISSN
1463-6786
1467-9957
Abstract
This paper considers the problem of allocating resources between economic goods and military goods in a contest model. We characterize the equilibrium and its stability in both cases where the two states' economic goods are substitutes and complements, and compare the outcomes. If the two states' economic goods are substitutes, there may exist multiple equilibria including at least one unstable equilibrium when a state has a comparative advantage in a sector. Without any such comparative advantage, a unique stable equilibrium results in which both states build-up the same level of military goods regardless of their relative sizes. A unique stable equilibrium also emerges if the two states' economic goods are complements with Cobb-Douglas utility characteristics. These results suggest that greater economic interdependence due to the complementarity slows down the arms races, and help stabilize the system. If the contest between the two states is a winner-take-all all-pay auction, there exists a pure strategy equilibrium. In this equilibrium, the state with an absolute advantage in the military sector takes all the resources by spending slightly more in the military sector than the other state. Such a finding contradicts most of the standard all-pay auctions, in which only a mixed strategy equilibrium exists.
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