
%0 Journal Article
%T Not for security only: The demand for international status and defence expenditure an introduction
%J Defence and peace economics
%D 1997
%A Kammler, Hans
%V 8
%N 1
%P 1-16
%X The analysis of military expenditure, inside alliances as well as outside, has gained much when the original Olson-Zeckhauser approach was generalized into the joint-product model of alliances as developed by Todd Sandier and others. This model allowed, as benefits to allies determining military expenditure, not only deterrence, a pure collective good, but partially collective goods like conventional fighting power and private (country-specific) benefits. The papers in this Special Issue explore the explanatory potential of also considering the demand for positional goods, in particular great-power status, as a determinant of military expenditure. The “exploitation of the strong by the weak” characterizing NATO until the early 1970s and during the American defence buildup of 1980-1985 might also be explained by an informal leader-follower bargain between the United States and its allies who traded acceptance of American hegemony for military protection and “hegemonic stability” of the world economy.<p />
%G 
%I Informa - Taylor and Francis Group
%@ 1024-2694
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10430719708404866