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Small arms procurement and corruption in small NATO countries

Bohuslav Pernica (Department of International Relations and European Studies, Faculty of Social Studies, Masaryk University, Brno, Czech Republic)
Donatas Palavenis (DIAG, Baltic Institute of Advanced Technology, Vilnius, Lithuania)
Jaroslav Dvorak (Department of Public Administration and Political Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities, Klaipeda University, Klaipeda, Lithuania)

Journal of Public Procurement

ISSN: 1535-0118

Article publication date: 9 July 2024

Issue publication date: 23 July 2024

75

Abstract

Purpose

The study aims to assess military procurement strategy in NATO countries labelled as emerging markets (Czechia, Slovakia and Lithuania) and capitalist Norway, which vary in national culture as indicated by the Hofstede Culture Compass.

Design/methodology/approach

This comparative case study analyses the procurement of a simple, mass-produced, off-the-shelf military product (FN Herstal MINIMI gun) in four small but very economically free countries from 2008 to 2023. The study answers the research question of how the unit price of MINIMI guns varies across post-communist and historical NATO countries distinguished by the variables operationalising national culture.

Findings

The general disability of the government to control corruption deviates the strategy of military procurement in post-communist defence institutions from an effective strategy of liberal capitalism, minimising the unit price and risks (Norway), to an odd strategy maximising the unit price and risks by preferring middlemen as agent of hidden agenda (Czechia).

Research limitations/implications

Some defence institutions in post-communist countries may be burdened by legislature capture, and detailed research is needed to determine this.

Practical implications

The authors argue that national culture may contribute to significant goal displacement in the procurement strategy adopted by the government in an economically liberal state.

Social implications

Without perfecting the control of corruption in post-communist defence institutions, the NATO burden-sharing debate on 2% of GDP will remain controversial.

Originality/value

With variables characterising national culture and the government’s ability to control corruption, the study elucidates a slow pace of convergence of post-communist countries to NATÓs values and procedures.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors are grateful to Kverulant.org, for sharing data on military procurement. This research was supported by the Czech Science Foundation in the project 22-25205S, “Structural obstacles and opportunities for the cooperation and integration of post-communist EU member countries in European defence cooperation”.

Citation

Pernica, B., Palavenis, D. and Dvorak, J. (2024), "Small arms procurement and corruption in small NATO countries", Journal of Public Procurement, Vol. 24 No. 3, pp. 348-370. https://doi.org/10.1108/JOPP-04-2024-0045

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2024, Emerald Publishing Limited

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