Going Bankrupt
Why the debt crisis is now the
greatest threat to the American republic
by Chalmers Johnson
www.alternet.org/, January 23,
2008
The military adventurers of the Bush administration
have much in common with the corporate leaders of the defunct
energy company Enron. Both groups of men thought that they were
the "smartest guys in the room," the title of Alex Gibney's
prize-winning film on what went wrong at Enron. The neoconservatives
in the White House and the Pentagon outsmarted themselves. They
failed even to address the problem of how to finance their schemes
of imperialist wars and global domination.
As a result, going into 2008, the United
States finds itself in the anomalous position of being unable
to pay for its own elevated living standards or its wasteful,
overly large military establishment. Its government no longer
even attempts to reduce the ruinous expenses of maintaining huge
standing armies, replacing the equipment that seven years of wars
have destroyed or worn out, or preparing for a war in outer space
against unknown adversaries. Instead, the Bush administration
puts off these costs for future generations to pay - or repudiate.
This utter fiscal irresponsibility has been disguised through
many manipulative financial schemes (such as causing poorer countries
to lend us unprecedented sums of money), but the time of reckoning
is fast approaching.
There are three broad aspects to our debt
crisis. First, in the current fiscal year (2008) we are spending
insane amounts of money on "defense" projects that bear
no relationship to the national security of the United States.
Simultaneously, we are keeping the income tax burdens on the richest
segments of the American population at strikingly low levels.
Second, we continue to believe that we
can compensate for the accelerating erosion of our manufacturing
base and our loss of jobs to foreign countries through massive
military expenditures - so-called "military Keynesianism,"
which I discuss in detail in my book Nemesis: The Last Days of
the American Republic. By military Keynesianism, I mean the mistaken
belief that public policies focused on frequent wars, huge expenditures
on weapons and munitions, and large standing armies can indefinitely
sustain a wealthy capitalist economy. The opposite is actually
true.
Third, in our devotion to militarism (despite
our limited resources), we are failing to invest in our social
infrastructure and other requirements for the long-term health
of our country. These are what economists call "opportunity
costs," things not done because we spent our money on something
else. Our public education system has deteriorated alarmingly.
We have failed to provide health care to all our citizens and
neglected our responsibilities as the world's number-one polluter.
Most important, we have lost our competitiveness as a manufacturer
for civilian needs - an infinitely more efficient use of scarce
resources than arms manufacturing. Let me discuss each of these.
The Current Fiscal Disaster
It is virtually impossible to overstate
the profligacy of what our government spends on the military.
The Department of Defense's planned expenditures for fiscal year
2008 are larger than all other nations' military budgets combined.
The supplementary budget to pay for the current wars in Iraq and
Afghanistan, not part of the official defense budget, is itself
larger than the combined military budgets of Russia and China.
Defense-related spending for fiscal 2008 will exceed $1 trillion
for the first time in history. The United States has become the
largest single salesman of arms and munitions to other nations
on Earth. Leaving out of account President Bush's two ongoing
wars, defense spending has doubled since the mid-1990s. The defense
budget for fiscal 2008 is the largest since World War II.
Before we try to break down and analyze
this gargantuan sum, there is one important caveat. Figures on
defense spending are notoriously unreliable. The numbers released
by the Congressional Reference Service and the Congressional Budget
Office do not agree with each other. Robert Higgs, senior fellow
for political economy at the Independent Institute, says, "A
well-founded rule of thumb is to take the Pentagon's (always well
publicized) basic budget total and double it." Even a cursory
reading of newspaper articles about the Department of Defense
will turn up major differences in statistics about its expenses.
Some 30-40 percent of the defense budget is "black,"
meaning that these sections contain hidden expenditures for classified
projects. There is no possible way to know what they include or
whether their total amounts are accurate.
There are many reasons for this budgetary
sleight-of-hand - including a desire for secrecy on the part of
the president, the secretary of defense, and the military-industrial
complex - but the chief one is that members of Congress, who profit
enormously from defense jobs and pork-barrel projects in their
districts, have a political interest in supporting the Department
of Defense. In 1996, in an attempt to bring accounting standards
within the executive branch somewhat closer to those of the civilian
economy, Congress passed the Federal Financial Management Improvement
Act. It required all federal agencies to hire outside auditors
to review their books and release the results to the public. Neither
the Department of Defense nor the Department of Homeland Security
has ever complied. Congress has complained, but not penalized
either department for ignoring the law. The result is that all
numbers released by the Pentagon should be regarded as suspect.
In discussing the fiscal 2008 defense
budget, as released to the press on Feb. 7, 2007, I have been
guided by two experienced and reliable analysts: William D. Hartung
of the New America Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative and
Fred Kaplan, defense correspondent for Slate.com. They agree that
the Department of Defense requested $481.4 billion for salaries,
operations (except in Iraq and Afghanistan), and equipment. They
also agree on a figure of $141.7 billion for the "supplemental"
budget to fight the "global war on terrorism" - that
is, the two ongoing wars that the general public may think are
actually covered by the basic Pentagon budget. The Department
of Defense also asked for an extra $93.4 billion to pay for hitherto
unmentioned war costs in the remainder of 2007 and, most creatively,
an additional "allowance" (a new term in defense budget
documents) of $50 billion to be charged to fiscal year 2009. This
comes to a total spending request by the Department of Defense
of $766.5 billion.
But there is much more. In an attempt
to disguise the true size of the American military empire, the
government has long hidden major military-related expenditures
in departments other than Defense. For example, $23.4 billion
for the Department of Energy goes toward developing and maintaining
nuclear warheads; and $25.3 billion in the Department of State
budget is spent on foreign military assistance (primarily for
Israel, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, the United
Arab Republic, Egypt, and Pakistan). Another $1.03 billion outside
the official Department of Defense budget is now needed for recruitment
and reenlistment incentives for the overstretched U.S. military
itself, up from a mere $174 million in 2003, the year the war
in Iraq began. The Department of Veterans Affairs currently gets
at least $75.7 billion, 50 percent of which goes for the long-term
care of the grievously injured among the at least 28,870 soldiers
so far wounded in Iraq and another 1,708 in Afghanistan. The amount
is universally derided as inadequate. Another $46.4 billion goes
to the Department of Homeland Security.
Missing as well from this compilation
is $1.9 billion to the Department of Justice for the paramilitary
activities of the FBI; $38.5 billion to the Department of the
Treasury for the Military Retirement Fund; $7.6 billion for the
military-related activities of the National Aeronautics and Space
Administration; and well over $200 billion in interest for past
debt-financed defense outlays. This brings U.S. spending for its
military establishment during the current fiscal year (2008),
conservatively calculated, to at least $1.1 trillion.
Military Keynesianism
Such expenditures are not only morally
obscene, they are fiscally unsustainable. Many neoconservatives
and poorly informed patriotic Americans believe that, even though
our defense budget is huge, we can afford it because we are the
richest country on Earth. Unfortunately, that statement is no
longer true. The world's richest political entity, according to
the CIA's World Factbook, is the European Union. The EU's 2006
GDP (gross domestic product - all goods and services produced
domestically) was estimated to be slightly larger than that of
the U.S. However, China's 2006 GDP was only slightly smaller than
that of the U.S., and Japan was the world's fourth richest nation.
A more telling comparison that reveals
just how much worse we're doing can be found among the "current
accounts" of various nations. The "current account"
measures the net trade surplus or deficit of a country plus cross-border
payments of interest, royalties, dividends, capital gains, foreign
aid, and other income. For example, in order for Japan to manufacture
anything, it must import all required raw materials. Even after
this incredible expense is met, it still has an $88 billion per
year trade surplus with the United States and enjoys the world's
second highest current account balance. (China is number one.)
The United States, by contrast, is number 163 - dead last on the
list, worse than countries like Australia and the United Kingdom
that also have large trade deficits. Its 2006 current account
deficit was $811.5 billion; second worst was Spain at $106.4 billion.
This is what is unsustainable.
It's not just that our tastes for foreign
goods, including imported oil, vastly exceed our ability to pay
for them. We are financing them through massive borrowing. On
Nov. 7, 2007, the U.S. Treasury announced that the national debt
had breached $9 trillion for the first time ever. This was just
five weeks after Congress raised the so-called debt ceiling to
$9.815 trillion. If you begin in 1789, at the moment the Constitution
became the supreme law of the land, the debt accumulated by the
federal government did not top $1 trillion until 1981. When George
Bush became president in January 2001, it stood at approximately
$5.7 trillion. Since then, it has increased by 45 percent. This
huge debt can be largely explained by our defense expenditures
in comparison with the rest of the world.
The world's top 10 military spenders and
the approximate amounts each country currently budgets for its
military establishment are:
1. United States (FY08 budget), $623 billion_2.
China (2004), $65 billion_3. Russia, $50 billion_4. France (2005),
$45 billion_5. Japan (2007), $41.75 billion_6. Germany (2003),
$35.1 billion_7. Italy (2003), $28.2 billion_8. South Korea (2003),
$21.1 billion_9. India (2005 est.), $19 billion_10. Saudi Arabia
(2005 est.), $18 billion
World total military expenditures (2004
est.), $1,100 billion_World total (minus the United States), $500
billion
Our excessive military expenditures did
not occur over just a few short years or simply because of the
Bush administration's policies. They have been going on for a
very long time in accordance with a superficially plausible ideology
and have now become entrenched in our democratic political system
where they are starting to wreak havoc. This ideology I call "military
Keynesianism" - the determination to maintain a permanent
war economy and to treat military output as an ordinary economic
product, even though it makes no contribution to either production
or consumption.
This ideology goes back to the first years
of the Cold War. During the late 1940s, the U.S. was haunted by
economic anxieties. The Great Depression of the 1930s had been
overcome only by the war production boom of World War II. With
peace and demobilization, there was a pervasive fear that the
Depression would return. During 1949, alarmed by the Soviet Union's
detonation of an atomic bomb, the looming communist victory in
the Chinese civil war, a domestic recession, and the lowering
of the Iron Curtain around the USSR's European satellites, the
U.S. sought to draft basic strategy for the emerging cold war.
The result was the militaristic National Security Council Report
68 (NSC-68) drafted under the supervision of Paul Nitze, then
head of the Policy Planning Staff in the State Department. Dated
April 14, 1950, and signed by President Harry S. Truman on Sept.
30, 1950, it laid out the basic public economic policies that
the United States pursues to the present day.
In its conclusions, NSC-68 asserted, "One
of the most significant lessons of our World War II experience
was that the American economy, when it operates at a level approaching
full efficiency, can provide enormous resources for purposes other
than civilian consumption while simultaneously providing a high
standard of living."
With this understanding, American strategists
began to build up a massive munitions industry, both to counter
the military might of the Soviet Union (which they consistently
overstated) and also to maintain full employment as well as ward
off a possible return of the Depression. The result was that,
under Pentagon leadership, entire new industries were created
to manufacture large aircraft, nuclear-powered submarines, nuclear
warheads, intercontinental ballistic missiles, and surveillance
and communications satellites. This led to what President Eisenhower
warned against in his farewell address of Feb. 6, 1961: "The
conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large arms
industry is new in the American experience" - that is, the
military-industrial complex.
By 1990, the value of the weapons, equipment,
and factories devoted to the Department of Defense was 83 percent
of the value of all plants and equipment in American manufacturing.
From 1947 to 1990, the combined U.S. military budgets amounted
to $8.7 trillion. Even though the Soviet Union no longer exists,
U.S. reliance on military Keynesianism has, if anything, ratcheted
up, thanks to the massive vested interests that have become entrenched
around the military establishment. Over time, a commitment to
both guns and butter has proven an unstable configuration. Military
industries crowd out the civilian economy and lead to severe economic
weaknesses. Devotion to military Keynesianism is, in fact, a form
of slow economic suicide.
On May 1, 2007, the Center for Economic
and Policy Research of Washington, D.C., released a study prepared
by the global forecasting company Global Insight on the long-term
economic impact of increased military spending. Guided by economist
Dean Baker, this research showed that, after an initial demand
stimulus, by about the sixth year the effect of increased military
spending turns negative. Needless to say, the U.S. economy has
had to cope with growing defense spending for more than 60 years.
He found that, after 10 years of higher defense spending, there
would be 464,000 fewer jobs than in a baseline scenario that involved
lower defense spending.
Baker concluded:
"It is often believed that wars and
military spending increases are good for the economy. In fact,
most economic models show that military spending diverts resources
from productive uses, such as consumption and investment, and
ultimately slows economic growth and reduces employment."
These are only some of the many deleterious
effects of military Keynesianism.
Hollowing Out the American Economy
It was believed that the U.S. could afford
both a massive military establishment and a high standard of living,
and that it needed both to maintain full employment. But it did
not work out that way. By the 1960s, it was becoming apparent
that turning over the nation's largest manufacturing enterprises
to the Department of Defense and producing goods without any investment
or consumption value was starting to crowd out civilian economic
activities. The historian Thomas E. Woods Jr. observes that, during
the 1950s and 1960s, between one-third and two-thirds of all American
research talent was siphoned off into the military sector. It
is, of course, impossible to know what innovations never appeared
as a result of this diversion of resources and brainpower into
the service of the military, but it was during the 1960s that
we first began to notice Japan was outpacing us in the design
and quality of a range of consumer goods, including household
electronics and automobiles.
Nuclear weapons furnish a striking illustration
of these anomalies. Between the 1940s and 1996, the United States
spent at least $5.8 trillion on the development, testing, and
construction of nuclear bombs. By 1967, the peak year of its nuclear
stockpile, the United States possessed some 32,500 deliverable
atomic and hydrogen bombs, none of which, thankfully, was ever
used. They perfectly illustrate the Keynesian principle that the
government can provide make-work jobs to keep people employed.
Nuclear weapons were not just America's secret weapon, but also
its secret economic weapon. As of 2006, we still had 9,960 of
them. There is today no sane use for them, while the trillions
spent on them could have been used to solve the problems of social
security and health care, quality education and access to higher
education for all, not to speak of the retention of highly skilled
jobs within the American economy.
The pioneer in analyzing what has been
lost as a result of military Keynesianism was the late Seymour
Melman (1917-2004), a professor of industrial engineering and
operations research at Columbia University. His 1970 book, Pentagon
Capitalism: The Political Economy of War, was a prescient analysis
of the unintended consequences of the American preoccupation with
its armed forces and their weaponry since the onset of the Cold
War. Melman wrote (pp. 2-3):
"From 1946 to 1969, the United States
government spent over $1,000 billion on the military, more than
half of this under the Kennedy and Johnson administrations - the
period during which the [Pentagon-dominated] state management
was established as a formal institution. This sum of staggering
size (try to visualize a billion of something) does not express
the cost of the military establishment to the nation as a whole.
The true cost is measured by what has been forgone, by the accumulated
deterioration in many facets of life by the inability to alleviate
human wretchedness of long duration."
In an important exegesis on Melman's relevance
to the current American economic situation, Thomas Woods writes:
"According to the U.S. Department
of Defense, during the four decades from 1947 through 1987 it
used (in 1982 dollars) $7.62 trillion in capital resources. In
1985, the Department of Commerce estimated the value of the nation's
plant and equipment, and infrastructure, at just over $7.29 trillion.
In other words, the amount spent over that period could have doubled
the American capital stock or modernized and replaced its existing
stock."
The fact that we did not modernize or
replace our capital assets is one of the main reasons why, by
the turn of the 21st century, our manufacturing base had all but
evaporated. Machine tools - an industry on which Melman was an
authority - are a particularly important symptom. In November
1968, a five-year inventory disclosed (p. 186) "that 64 percent
of the metalworking machine tools used in U.S. industry were ten
years old or older. The age of this industrial equipment (drills,
lathes, etc.) marks the United States' machine tool stock as the
oldest among all major industrial nations, and it marks the continuation
of a deterioration process that began with the end the Second
World War. This deterioration at the base of the industrial system
certifies to the continuous debilitating and depleting effect
that the military use of capital and research and development
talent has had on American industry."
Nothing has been done in the period since
1968 to reverse these trends and it shows today in our massive
imports of equipment - from medical machines like proton accelerators
for radiological therapy (made primarily in Belgium, Germany,
and Japan) to cars and trucks.
Our short tenure as the world's "lone
superpower" has come to an end. As Harvard economics professor
Benjamin Friedman has written:
"Again and again it has always been
the world's leading lending country that has been the premier
country in terms of political influence, diplomatic influence,
and cultural influence. It's no accident that we took over the
role from the British at the same time that we took over the
job of being the world's leading lending country. Today we are
no longer the world's leading lending country. In fact we are
now the world's biggest debtor country, and we are continuing
to wield influence on the basis of military prowess alone."
Some of the damage done can never be rectified.
There are, however, some steps that this country urgently needs
to take. These include reversing Bush's 2001 and 2003 tax cuts
for the wealthy, beginning to liquidate our global empire of over
800 military bases, cutting from the defense budget all projects
that bear no relationship to the national security of the United
States, and ceasing to use the defense budget as a Keynesian jobs
program. If we do these things we have a chance of squeaking by.
If we don't, we face probable national insolvency and a long depression.
Chalmers Johnson is the author of Nemesis:
The Last Days of the American Republic, just published in paperback.
It is the final volume of his Blowback Trilogy, which also includes
Blowback (2000) and The Sorrows of Empire (2004).
[Note: For those interested, click here
to view a clip from a new film, "Chalmers Johnson on American
Hegemony," in Cinema Libre Studios' Speaking Freely series
in which he discusses "military Keynesianism" and imperial
bankruptcy. For sources on global military spending, please see:
(1) Global Security Organization, "World Wide Military Expenditures"
as well as Glenn Greenwald, "The bipartisan consensus on
U.S. military spending"; (2) Stockholm International Peace
Research Institute, "Report: China biggest Asian military
spender."]
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