Costs of War, by Heidi Garrett-Peltier

Your relationship with government is simple: government knows everything about you, and you know nothing about government. In practice this means government can do whatever it wants to you before you know it's going to happen. Government policy makers think this is a good way of ensuring citizen compliance. Thus, all of these investigations are retrospective -- they look back at the squirrely shit that government has pulled, and occasionally wring their hands about trying to avoid it happening in the future. Not inspiring reading, but necessary if you are to face the cold reality that Big Brother is more than watching.

Costs of War, by Heidi Garrett-Peltier

Postby admin » Sat Jan 09, 2016 5:46 am

Costs of War
by Heidi Garrett-Peltier
Watson Institute International & Public Affairs, Brown University
February, 2015

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Employment Impact

Military spending by the federal government is often considered a vital support to employment and economic recovery.

However, military spending creates fewer jobs than the same amount of money would have, if invested in other sectors. Clean energy and health care spending create 50 percent more jobs than the equivalent amount of spending on the military. Education spending creates more than twice as many jobs.

There are three reasons why this is the case. Industries such as education and clean energy are more labor-intensive. For a given level of spending, more of those dollars go toward hiring workers and less on equipment and materials. Also, a greater percentage of spending in education, health care, and clean energy construction stays within the US, creating more domestic jobs. Military personnel spend more of their earnings abroad and foreign contractors and employees get some portion of Pentagon spending. Finally, since wages and benefits are lower in those sectors than they are for military contractors and personnel on average, the same amount of money hires more people in those non-military sectors.

As a result, if over the years 2001-2014 the US had not been at war but instead had channeled resources into expanding the clean energy industry, broadening health care coverage, and increasing educational opportunities, between 1 and 3 million more jobs would have been created, reducing unemployment significantly.

Key Findings

• $1 billion in military spending creates approximately 11,200 jobs, compared with 26,700 in education, 16,800 in clean energy, and 17,200 in health care.
• The same amount of spending generates more jobs in certain non-military sectors because of differences in labor intensity, domestic investment, and wage levels.

Recommendations

• Congressional decision-making should foreground and use information about the job creation effects of military spending versus spending in other sectors.
(Page updated as of February 2015)
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