Non-Linear Effects Of Terrorism On Economic Growth in Pakistan: Accounting For Capital Per Worker and Structural Breaks
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 09:31authored byRonald KumarRonald Kumar, Syed Shahzad, Peter Stauvermann, Nikeel Kumar
In this study, we examine the asymmetric effects of terrorism and economic growth in Pakistan over the period 1970-2016, while considering the role of capital per worker and structural breaks. We use the non-linear ARDL approach to establish the long-run association and to estimate the short-run and long-run effects accordingly. The results indicate the presence of asymmetries in both long and short run. Moreover, 1% decrease in terrorism results in an increase of per capita income by 0.02% in the long run and 0.001% in the short run. Assuming symmetry, the long run capital share is 0.47. In asymmetric relation, a 1% increase in capital share increases output by 0.55%, whereas a 1% decrease in capital stock decreases output by 0.26%. The break effects show that the years 1993 and 2004 have negative effects on growth. The vector error correction model-based causality results indicate a unidirectional causality from terrorism to per capita income. Overall, the results highlight that terrorism is growth retarding.