Peter J. Phillips

Email: Peter.Phillips@usq.edu.au


Peter J. Phillips is a Senior Lecturer in Finance at the University of Southern Queensland, Toowoomba, Australia where has been teaching economics and finance since 1998. Peter’s best known work is in the field of defence economics where he has shown how the microeconomic theory of finance and financial economics can be applied to the analysis of terrorism and national security. His work has been cited by researchers at RAND and one of his papers is currently on the Peace Economics, Peace Science and Public Policy journal’s Top Ten most popular papers at Berkeley’s Electronic Press. Peter is working on a book on defence economics and lone wolf terrorism that expands on the ideas contained in his journal articles.




Papers Published in World Economics:


The Diseconomies of Terrorism

The Global Terrorism Database (GTD) contains many active and inactive terrorist groups. The defining characteristic of the terrorist groups contained in the GTD is smallness. Unlike the modern business enterprise, for example, there appears to be no trend towards ‘bigness’. This paper presents an analysis of the size distribution of terrorist groups and the implications of this size distribution for the technological conditions under which the output of terrorism may be increased. With net internal and external diseconomies to larger-scale production of terrorism, we should observe relatively small terrorist groups and little or no tendency for the number and size of terrorist groups in the ‘terrorism industry’ to increase. These facts do characterise the empirically observed size distribution of terrorist groups, and imply that the technological conditions under which the output of terrorism may be increased are characterised by internal and external diseconomies to larger-scale production of terrorism.

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