You also examine the cost beyond the impact on the
federal budget.
Yes. We look at where the budget underestimates the social cost of
the war. Take disability pay. If you're wounded, the government
pays you only twenty percent of what you would have earned if you
could work. The disability payment is a budget cost, but the
economy misses the salary you would have been making now that
you're not able to do anything.
At least they saved taxpayers money on body
armor.
Not really. Rumsfeld made the defense budget a little lower in the
short term by not providing the troops with adequate body armor.
But the government now has to pay for the care of vets with
disabling brain and spine injuries -- and society loses what their
contribution would have been had they been gainfully employed. It's
a good illustration of how looking at the short-run number leads
you to think the war isn't costing all that much. It's costing the
government more, our society more and our veterans enormously
more.
Another example of Rumsfeld's budgeting is the huge bonuses we're paying to get soldiers to re-enlist. He wanted to lessen the impact of the war on the military, so he used private contractors, who are more expensive. What he didn't realize was that he was setting up a competition that has driven up the price of a soldier. If someone who has served his enlistment has a choice of working as a contractor for $100,000 or in the military for $25,000, what's he going to do? Wages and bonuses had to go up. Maybe that's a good thing -- the regular military was being cheated, in a way. But it's another cost of the war that isn't figured into the budget.
So Bush's budget for the war is as out of touch with
reality as his justifications for invading Iraq in the first
place.
The administration is trying to sell the notion that they have
repealed the laws of economics. They want us to believe that we
don't have to choose between guns and butter -- that we can have
them both. The reality is, the money spent on the war could have
been spent on other things.
Such as?
One quarter of the war budget would have fixed Social Security for
the next seventy-five years. George Bush says that Social Security
is a major economic problem. If you believe him -- although there
are many reasons not to believe him -- the war is four times worse
as an economic problem.
With $2 trillion, we could have funded the entire world's commitment to foreign aid to poor countries for the next twenty years. Or just think what we could have done to stop global warming if we had spent that two trillion developing cheaper photovoltaic cells to convert solar energy into electricity. With our technological advantages, we could have had some real breakthroughs. We have the resources -- we just need to redirect them from destroying another country.
Will average Americans notice any economic fallout from
the war?
We'll have a lower living standard than we otherwise would have
achieved. The median American income is going down. Most of us are
worse off than we were five or six years ago. Why are we getting
poorer? This big pot of money we spent on the war obviously has
something to do with it. Americans have a hard time seeing it when
the numbers come out in dribs and drabs. But when it's $2 trillion?
Did we really want to spend it like this? It's hard to think how we
could have spent it worse.
Has Bush responded to your calculations?
To my knowledge, nobody in the administration has challenged our
numbers. All they've said is that we didn't include the benefits of
the war, which is true. There is no way to assess the benefits.
There are some little savings we subtracted out, such as the no-fly
zone over Iraq: We don't have to pay to patrol it any more, because
there is nothing to enforce with Saddam out of power. But the
administration can't exactly claim that they have brought peace,
stability and democracy to the Middle East.
They also argue that they didn't go to war on the basis of green-eyeshade calculations. That's true, but they did do a calculation of the cost. They were just off. Like every other aspect of their analysis of this war, they were either deliberately misleading or incompetent.
Paul Wolfowitz actually claimed that the war would pay
for itself with oil revenue.
You have to wonder: What reward should he receive for such acumen?
Bush made him president of the World Bank.
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