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Defense Spending and the U.S. Economy
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16939 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
4 / 1990 |
4,096 Words |
| Author
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Murray Weidenbaum Murray Weidenbaum director of the Center for the Study of
American Business at Washington University in St. Louis and a
former chairman of the President's Council of Economic
Advisers. |
Public policy in the United States sometimes seems to shift as rapidly as seasonal fashions. For years, many analysts bemoaned the heavy burden of military expenditures borne by the American economy. Nowadays, in contrast, a feeling is growing rapidly that a generous peace dividend could finance all sorts of "unmet" social needs. Some perspective is very much needed in order to contain any impending shift from gloom to euphoria.
Paul Kennedy of Yale warned in 1987 that too large a proportion of a nation's resources being allotted to military purposes most likely would lead to "a weakening of national power over the longer run." Former Sen. J. William Fulbright seemed to believe that the United States had already attained that sad state. In early 1989, he wrote that the United States had "become a militarized economy." By December 1989, Seymour Melman of Columbia University was renewing his perennial plea to convert a military establishment that in his view was the reason the United States is "no longer a first-class industrial economy."
This article examines the changing role of defense in the American economy in an effort to shed some light on the emerging debate on "peace dividends" and "conversion." On the basis of a variety of economic and statistical analyses, I arrive at a very different set of conclusions than those cited above. First of all, the military burden, although significant, has been far from overwhelming. In fact, the trend has been downward for decades. Second, the reductions now contemplated would be merely a modest acceleration of that downward-sloping trend line. Surely, economic adjustments to the contemplated changes in defense spending also will be modest - both in terms of dislocation to be
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