"Shovel ready."
It's the magic incantation to fix our economic woes. Many
states and federal agencies have already gone from scouring their budgets for
things to cut to green- lighting construction projects. The Obama
administration's $787 billion stimulus package is sure to muster many shovels
in an effort to rouse a despondent economy and put Americans back to work.
Here's the strange thing, though: That package was headline
news for weeks, bitterly argued over, hailed and derided in equal measure. And yet
road construction, housing projects and green retrofits aren't the only major
projects getting the shovel-ready treatment via massive infusions of cash.
At the end of February, another huge "stimulus"
package was announced but generated almost no comment, controversy, or
argument. The defense industry received its own special stimulus package --
news of the dollars available for the Pentagon budget in 2010; and at nearly
$700 billion (when all the bits and pieces are added in), it's almost as big as
the Obama economic package and sure to be a lot less effective.
Despite the sort of economic maelstrom not seen in
generations, the defense industry, insulated by an enduring conviction that war
spending stimulates the economy, remains almost impervious to budget cuts. To
understand why military spending is no longer a stimulus driver means putting
aside memories of Rosie the Riveter and the sepia-hued worker on the bomber
assembly line and remembering instead that the Great Depression came before
"the Good War," not the other way around. In World War II, it's also
important to recall, the massive military buildup was labor intensive, employed
millions, and was accompanied by rationing, austerity and very high taxes.
This time around, we began with boom years and spent our way
into the breach, in significant part by launching unnecessary, profligate wars.
Meanwhile, President George W. Bush cut taxes at a more than peacetime pace and
borrowed like an addicted gambler on a losing streak to underwrite his wars of
choice, including his "Global War on Terror." If the former
president's nearly trillion-dollar (and counting) global war got us into this
mess, by simple logic it's not likely to bail us out as well.
Riding the Slide to Billions
While the good times rolled during the long slide from
surplus to deficit, from no war to global war, it wasn't just the Merrill
Lynches and subprime mortgage giants that cleaned up. Lockheed Martin, Boeing,
and Northrop Grumman--the top three defense contractors--had a ball, too.
In 2002, the first full year of what came to be known as the
Global War on Terror, for instance, those three companies--ranking first,
second, and third on the Pentagon's list of top ten contractors--split $42
billion in contract awards, more than two-thirds of the $67 billion distributed
among the top ten Pentagon contractors.
In 2007, the last year for which full contracting data is
available, the same Big Three split $69 billion in Pentagon contracts, which
was more than the total received by the top 10 companies just five years
earlier. The top ten divvied up $121 billion in contracts in 2007, an 80
percent increase over 2002. Lockheed Martin, the number-one Pentagon
contractor, graduated from a mere $17 billion in awarded contracts in 2002 to
$28 billion in 2007. That's a leap of 64 percent. Given such figures, it's easy
enough to understand how the basic military budget--excluding money for actual
war-fighting--jumped from about $300 billion to more than $500 billion during
the Bush years.
Given the economic climate, it's no surprise that the three
defense giants have all posted losses in the past few weeks. But before the
hankies come out and the histrionics start, it should be noted that Lockheed
Martin alone has an $81 billion backlog in orders, enough to keep chugging
along for another two years without a single new contract.
If such war spending had been an effective stimulus for the
economy, we would be roaring along on twelve cylinders today. But increasingly
this kind of spending mainly stimulates corporate shareholders, stock prices
and (of course) war itself.
No matter, the staggering new defense budget ensures that,
for the defense industry, some version of good times will continue to roll,
even if the economic impact of these huge military investments proves
negligible and the need in other areas is staggering.
The 2010 Defense Budget
President Obama is reportedly intent on digging deep into
the Pentagon budget. He has given his Office of Management and Budget until
April to complete an "exhaustive line-by-line" review of the detailed
budget request before it is released. In speeches, he has focused on wasteful
and unnecessary defense spending.
Just days ago, Obama insisted that "the days of giving
defense contractors a blank check are over." To underline that assertion,
he cited a 2008 Government Accountability Office study that found 95 military
projects over budget by a total of $295 billion. He pledged to end such
egregious practices, and the no-bid contracts that often go with them. That
applause line plays well at a time when belts are tightening uncomfortably and
boot straps remain elusive, but it misses a reality, no less potentially
important in the Obama era than in the preceding one: for (at least) the last
eight years, defense contractors haven't needed a "blank check"
because they already have the combination to the safe, the PIN number to the
account and a controlling interest on the board of the bank.
Given the promised size of the next Pentagon budget, no
matter what weapons programs are cut or companies and contracts disciplined,
the "bank board" will remain the same because the overall amount
available to it shows no signs of changing. In fact, basic funding levels (not
including money still being set aside for the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq) are remarkably in line with
the most recent Bush administration budget, right down to prospective further
increases. The just-released overall figure for the 2010 Pentagon budget is
actually $533.7 billion; that is, $20.4 billion higher than Bush's last base
budget.
President Obama does not like the term "Global War on
Terror" (GWOT), dispensing with the Bush administration's moniker of
choice to describe the most costly array of military operations since World War
II. But Obama's Pentagon will continue to spend a GWOT-sized chunk of our
national treasure, even as troops trickle home from Iraq
and the surge relocates to Afghanistan's
inhospitable steppes. The preliminary figure for war-fighting in 2010 is $130
billion, which represents a modest decrease from the $144 billion that is
expected to go to military operations in 2009. Add that to the base Pentagon
budget and you get a subtotal of $664 billion for 2010 military expenditures.
If the estimated costs of military spending lodged in other
parts of the federal budget (like funding for nuclear weapons, which is
considered the bailiwick of the Department of Energy), as well as miscellaneous
non-Defense Department defense costs--about $23 billion last time around--are
also included, then President Obama's first military budget should come in at
around $670 billion.
After the preliminary budget figures were released,
Secretary of Defense Robert Gates told reporters, "In our country's
current economic circumstances, I believe that represents a strong commitment
to our security." Almost $700 billion is a strong commitment alright.
Unfortunately, as a stimulus commitment--and a largely unquestioned one at
that--it is certain to prove a drag on our economic recovery, despite the
claims of the defense industry and their ever-present publicists and lobbyists.
Lifting America by the (Combat) Bootstraps?
And are we hearing those claims these days! The Aerospace
Industries Association (AIA), representing more than 100 leading defense and
aerospace corporations, has been trumpeting their contributions to the economy
in a print ad campaign and on their website under the catch-phrase: "Aerospace
and Defense: The Strength to Lift America."
In terms of American well-being, the AIA estimates that
defense and aerospace manufacturers contribute $97 billion in exports a year,
while maintaining 2 million jobs. As Fred Downey, an association vice
president, told the Associated Press, "Our industry is ready and able to
lead the way out of the economic crisis."
As the association sees it, defense and aerospace
corporations are about as shovel-ready as you can get. The US Bureau of Labor
Statistics (BLS), however, offers quite a different view of the AIA's two-million
jobs claim. Their "Career Guide to Industries," for example, looks
intensively at Aerospace Product and Parts Manufacturing (which would also
include some non-defense related corporations) and finds that the sector
employed 472,000 wage and salary workers in 2006. Now, this is not the whole
picture of defense-related employment, but according to the Associated Press,
the BLS estimates that only 647,000 people work in industries where at least
one-fifth of the products are defense-related.
Perhaps the AIA was including not just jobs making weapons
but jobs lobbying Congress to pay for them. Then Downey and crew might almost
have a case. The BLS would probably not consider lobbyist jobs to be
defense-related, but maybe they should, because the Center for Responsive
Politics, a research group that tracks money in politics, reports that the
industry spent $149 million on lobbying firms to get its points across to
Congress and the administration last year. That has to be a lot of shovel-ready
jobs right there.
Speaking of shovel-ready jobs shoveling out defense industry
claims, if the lobbying sector is happy, ad firms must be ecstatic. These days,
defense contractors and associations are spending striking sums on what's
politely termed "public education": full-page ads in major
newspapers, ads in Washington metro stations near the Pentagon, Crystal City (a
Virginia community where many Pentagon satellite offices are located), Capitol
Hill and other places where the powerful congregate when their limos are in
use, not to speak of aggressive pop-up ads on political news sites like the National
Journal.
Lockheed Martin, for example, recently unveiled a new ad campaign
pitched towards troubled economic times. It depicts proud blue-collar workers above
the tagline: "95,000 employed, 300 million protected." At the bottom
of the ad are the logos of the supersonic fighter plane known as the F-22
Raptor and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers
whose members build it. As if to underline these messages, 200 members of
Congress signed a January 20 "Dear Mr. President, Save the F-22"
letter, meant to be waiting for Barack Obama as he entered the Oval Office. The
letter asserted that the F-22 program "annually provides over $12 billion
of economic activity to the national economy."
Even if that dubious claim were substantiated, the economic
activity comes at a high cost. The United States spent more than $65 billion to
design and produce the F-22 Raptor--a fighter plane originally conceived to
penetrate the airspace of the long-extinct Soviet Union, to counter large
formations of enemy bombers in cold war scenarios that are today inconceivable,
and to achieve air superiority high over Eastern Europe whose greatest problems
now involve a potential region-wide economic meltdown. In the wake of the cold
war, as military analyst Chalmers Johnson recently pointed out, the F-22 lacks
a role in any imaginable war-fighting scenario the US might actually find
itself in.
Efforts to promote the plane as a critical tool in the
Global War on Terror floundered when Defense Secretary Gates spoke plainly about
the system's uselessness last year. "The reality," he said, "is
we are fighting two wars, in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the F-22 has not
performed a single mission in either theater."
Fortunately for Lockheed Martin, once the US economy began
to crater, it could emphasize a new on-the-ground use for the F-22--as an
instant make-work jobs program.
However, even there the plane's utility is questionable.
William D. Hartung, director of the New America
Foundation's Arms and Security Initiative, points out that,
if the F-22 program is cut, the "job losses will be stretched out over two
and half years or more, and could happen after the end of the current
recession." In addition, Lockheed has had to back away from the 95,000
jobs claims, clarifying that more than 70 percent of those jobs are only
indirectly related to the F-22, and that just 25,000 workers are employed
directly on the plane's construction. Winslow Wheeler is the head of the Center
for Defense Information's Straus Military Reform Project and his scholarship is
built on more than thirty years of service at the Government Accountability
Office and on the Senate Budget Committee, among other places. He points out
that, when it comes to high-tech weapons, today's military-industrial complex
bears not the slightest resemblance to its World War II predecessor as a job
generator. As he describes it, in the early 1940s "production lines
cranked out thousands of aircraft each month: as fast as the government could
stuff money, materials and workers into the assembly line."
In stark contrast, the F-22, he points out, is essentially
an artisanal product. "Go to Lockheed Martin's plant," he writes.
"You will find no detectable movement of aircraft out the door. Instead
you will see virtually stationary aircraft and workers applying parts in a manner
more evocative of hand-crafting. This 'production rate' generates one F-22
every 18 days or so." This is, in fact, what shovel-ready largely means in
Pentagon stimulus terms these days.
War for Jobs?
Economists have also weighed in on why "war for
jobs" as a way out of recession or depression has entered the world of
mythology. An analysis from the University of Massachusetts's Political Economy
Research Institute, for instance, finds that, for every one billion dollars
invested in defense, 8,555 jobs are created. By contrast, the same billion
invested in health care would create 12,883 jobs, and in education, 17,687 jobs
or more than double the defense stimulus payoff.
It has often been said that World War II--and the production
stimulus it offered--lifted the United States out of the Great Depression.
Today, the opposite seems to be the case. The "war economy" helped
propel the US into what might turn out to be another great depression, and so,
unlike in 1929, as our economy crumbles today, we are already on a global war
footing.
As the Obama administration grapples with economic disaster
and inherited wars, it will have the added challenge of confronting a
military-industrial complex accustomed to budgets that reach almost
three-quarters of a trillion dollars, based on exaggerated global threats,
unsubstantiated economic claims, and entrenched profligacy. When Obama's analysts
pore over the budget, looking at all those overpriced weapons and plum
contracts, they'll have to ask: Is each weapons system or program actually
needed for American security and is it cost effective? Or are the defense
contractors shoveling a load of shovel-ready bull?