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Fallacy of War as the Fiscal Stimulus of Last Resort By Ellen Brown Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, September 12, 2011 “War! Good God, ya’ll. What is it good for? Absolutely nothin’!” So went the Bruce Springsteen
pop hit of the 1980s, first produced as an anti-Vietnam War song in 1969.
The song echoed popular sentiment.
The Vietnam War ended.
Then the Cold War ended.
Yet military spending remains the government’s
number one expenditure.
When veterans’ benefits and other past
military costs are factored in,
half the government’s budget
now goes to the military/industrial complex.
Protesters have been trying to stop this
juggernaut ever since the end of World War II, yet the war machine is more
powerful and influential than ever.
Why?
The veiled powers pulling the strings no doubt
have their own dark agenda, but why has our much-trumpeted system of
political democracy not been able to stop them?
The answer may involve our individualistic,
laissez-faire brand of capitalism, which forbids the government to compete
with private business except in cases of “national emergency.” The problem
is that private business needs the government to get money into people’s
pockets and stimulate demand. The process has to start somewhere, and
government has the tools to do it. But in our culture, any hint of
“socialism” is anathema. The result has been a state of “national emergency”
has had to be declared virtually all of the time, just to get the
government’s money into the economy.
Other avenues being blocked, the productive civilian economy has been systematically sucked into the non-productive military sector, until war is now our number one export. War is where the money is and where the jobs are. The United States has been turned into a permanent war economy and military state.
War as Economic Stimulus The notion that war is good for the economy goes back at
least to World War II. Critics of Keynesian-style deficit spending insisted
that it was war, not deficit spending, that got the U.S. out of the Great
Depression.
But while war may have triggered
the surge in productivity that followed, the reason war worked was that it
opened the deficit floodgates.
The war
was
a huge stimulus to economic growth, not because it was a cost-effective use
of resources, but because nobody worries about deficits in wartime.
In peacetime, on the other hand, when the government was
not supposed to engage in competitive enterprise.
As Nobel Prize winner Frederick Soddy observed:
The old extreme laissez-faire policy
of individualistic economics jealously denied to the State the right of
competing in any way with individuals in the ownership of productive
enterprise, out of which monetary interest or profit
can be made . . . .
In the 1930s, the government
was allowed to invest in such domestic ventures as the Tennessee Valley
Authority, but this was largely because private sector investors did not
believe they could turn a sufficient profit on the projects themselves.
The upshot was that the years between 1933
and 1937 proved to be
the biggest cyclical boom in U.S. history.
Real gross domestic product (GDP) grew at a 12
percent rate and nominal GDP grew at a 14 percent rate.
But when the economy appeared to be back on its feet in 1937,
Roosevelt was leaned on to cut back on public investment. The result
was a surge in unemployment. The economic boom died and the economy slipped
back into depression. World War II
reversed this cycle by re-opening the money spigots.
“National security” trumped all, as
Congress spent with reckless abandon to “preserve our way of life.”
The all-out challenge of World War II allowed Congress to fund a
flurry of industrial activity, as it ran up a tab on the national credit
card that was 120%
of GDP. The government ran up the
largest debt in its history. Yet the hyperinflation, currency devaluation,
and economic collapse predicted by the deficit hawks did not occur. Rather,
the machinery and infrastructure built during
that booming period set the nation up to lead the world in productivity for
the next half century. By the 1970s, the debt-to-GDP ratio had dropped from
120% to less than 40%, not because people sacrificed to pay back the debt,
but because the economy was so productive that
GDP rose to
close the gap.
Stimulus Without War World
War II may have created jobs; but like all wars, it took a terrible toll.
Economist
John Maynard Keynes observed:
Pyramid-building, earthquakes, even wars may serve to increase wealth,
if the
education of our statesmen on the principles of the classical economics
stands in the way of anything better.
[Emphasis added.]
War was the economic stimulus of
last resort when politicians were so confused in their understanding of
economics that they would not allow the government to go into debt except
for national emergencies. But Keynes said there are less destructive
ways to get money into people’s
pockets and stimulate the economy. Workers
could be paid to dig ditches and fill them back up, and it would stimulate
the economy. What a lagging economy needed was simply
demand
(available purchasing power).
Demand would then stimulate businesses to
produce more “supply”, creating more jobs and driving productivity. The key
was that demand (money to spend) must come
first.
The Chinese have put workers to
work building massive malls and apartment buildings, many of which are
standing empty for lack of customers and purchasers. It may be a wasteful
use of resources, but it has succeeded in putting wages in workers’ pockets,
giving them the purchasing power to spend on products and services,
stimulating economic growth; and unlike wasteful war spending, the Chinese
approach has not involved death and destruction.
A less costly alternative would
be Milton Friedman’s hypothetical solution: simply drop money from
helicopters. This has been linked to “quantitative easing” (QE), but QE as
currently applied is not what Friedman described. The money has not been
showered on the people and the local economy, putting money in people’s
pockets, stimulating spending.
It has been dropped into the reserve accounts
of banks, where it has simply accumulated without reaching the productive
economy. “Excess” reserves of
$1.6 trillion are
now sitting in reserve accounts at the Federal Reserve. A helicopter drop of
the sort proposed by Friedman has not been tried. A
Better Solution War, digging ditches, and
dropping money from helicopters could all work to stimulate demand and
increase purchasing power, but there are better alternatives.
Today we have major unmet needs --
infrastructure that is falling apart, overcrowded classrooms, energy systems
waiting for development, research labs in need of funding.
The most cost-effective solution today would
be for the government to stimulate the economy by spending on work that
actually improves the standard of living of the people. This could be done while
actually
reducing the
national debt. In a recent
article, David
Swanson cites a
study by Robert
Greenwald and Derrick Crowe, looking at the $60 billion lost by the Pentagon
to waste and fraud in Iraq and Afghanistan. They calculated that this money
could have created 193,000
more jobs than its
military use created, if diverted to domestic commercial purposes. Swanson
goes on: There
are some other calculations in the same study . . . . If we had spent that
$60 billion on clean energy, we would have created (directly or indirectly)
330,000 more jobs. If we'd spent it on healthcare, we'd have created 480,000
more jobs. And if we'd spent it on education, we'd have created 1.05 million
more jobs. . . . Let's
say we want to create 29 million jobs in 10 years. That's 2.9 million each
year. Here's one way to do it. Take $100 billion from the Department of
Defense and move it into education. That creates 1.75 million jobs per year.
Take another $50 billion and move it into healthcare spending. There's an
additional 400,000 jobs. Take another $100 billion and move it into clean
energy. There's another 550,000 jobs. And take another $62 billion and turn
it into tax cuts, generating an additional 200,000 jobs. Now the military
spending in the Department of Energy, the State Department, Homeland
Security, and so forth have not been touched. And the Department of Defense
has been cut back to about $388 billion, which is to say: more than it was
getting 10 years ago when our country went collectively insane. Labor and resources are sitting idle while the bogeyman of “deficits” deprives the population of the goods and services they could create. Diverting a portion of our massive war spending to peaceful use could add jobs, improve living standards, and add infrastructure, while reducing the national debt and balancing the government’s budget by increasing the tax base and government revenues. Prepared for “The Military Industrial Complex at 50”, a conference in Charlottesville, VA, September 16-18, 2011. Ellen Brown is an attorney and president of the Public Banking Institute, http://PublicBankingInstitute.org. In Web of Debt, her latest of eleven books, she shows how a private cartel has usurped the power to create money from the people themselves, and how we the people can get it back. Her websites are http://webofdebt.com and http://ellenbrown.com. |
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