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http://www.lewrockwell.com/rockwell/warandeconomy.html
What You Should Know About War and the Economy

by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.

There's something about the prospect of an interview that focuses the
mind. I write as I prepare to leave for an extended interview with Bill
Moyers for PBS. He wants to know how it is possible to be against this war,
and the policies of the Bush administration, and also be for a free and
globally engaged commercial republic. To put it more crudely, how can we
make sense of the phenomenon of right-wing anti-war theory and practice?

Behind the query is the longstanding canard that war is good for the
economy. If what you care about is a prosperous economy, why wouldn't it
make sense to spend hundreds of billions on huge industrial products like
military planes and tanks? Why not employ hundreds of thousands in a
great public-works program like war? Why not destroy a country so that
money can funnel to American companies in charge of rebuilding it?
Doesn't all of this help us out of the recession?

All these questions somehow come back to Bastiat's "Broken Window"
fallacy. In the story, a boy throws a rock through a window. Regrets for
this act of destruction are all around. But then a confused intellectual
pops up to explain that this is a good thing after all. The window will have
to be fixed, which gives business to the glazier, who will use it to buy a
suit, helping the tailor, and so on. Where's the fallacy? It comes down to
focusing on the seen (the new spending) as versus the unseen (what might
have been done with the resources had they not had to be diverted to
window repair).

Let us never forget that the military is the largest single government
bureaucracy. It produces nothing. It only consumes resources which it
takes from taxpayers by force of law. Making matters worse, all these
resources are directed toward the building and maintenance of weapons
of mass destruction and those who will operate them. The military machine
is the boy with the rock writ large. It does not create wealth. It diverts it
from more productive uses.

How big is the US military? It is by far the largest and most potentially
destructive in the history of the world. The US this year will spend in
excess of $400 billion (not including much spy spending). The next largest
spender is Russia, which spends only 14% of the US total. To equal US
spending, the military budgets of the next 27 highest spenders have to be
added together. If you consider this, and also consider the disparity of the
US nuclear stockpile and the 120 countries in which the US keeps its
troops, you begin to see why the US is so widely regarded as an imperialist
power and a threat to world peace.

This is very hard for Americans to understand. We tend to think of the
American nation as a mere extension of our own lives. We all work hard.
We mind our own business. We tend to our families and involve ourselves in
local civic activities. We love our history and are proud of our founding.
We are pleased by our prosperity (even if we don't know why it exists). We
think most other Americans live the way we do. We tend to think our
government (if we think about it at all) is nothing but an extension of this
way of life.

A deadly military empire? Don't be ridiculous. The military is just defending
the country. Bush is a potential tyrant? Get real! He's a good man. Those
crazy foreigners who resent the US are really no better than those people
who attacked us on September 11, 2001: they envy our wealth and hate us
for our goodness. We are a godly people, which makes our enemies
ungodly, even demonic. This is a short summary of a widely held view, one
that those who seek a government-dominated society use to build their
public-sector empire.

What most Americans refuse to face is that what the government does day
to day, and in particular its military arm, is not an extension of the way the
rest of us live. Government knows only one mode of operation: coercion.
It does not cooperate; it coerces. Because it is constantly overriding
human choices, it makes unrelenting error, most often producing
consequences opposite of the stated intention. This is no less true in its
foreign operations than it is in its domestic ones.

Consider the most recent military action in Afghanistan. The Taliban was
nothing but a reincarnation of the opposition tribes the US supported
when the country was being run by the Soviets in the 1980s. Back then we
called them freedom fighters. When the Taliban fled the capital city last
year, the US knew where to look for them because the US assisted in
building their hideouts during the last war.

What did the war do to the country? All hoopla aside, it is no freer, no
more democratic, and no more prosperous. The warlords are running the
country and women are still subject to fundamentalist Islamic dictate. How
many civilians did the US kill? Thousands, perhaps many thousands. During
the war, every day brought news of a few dozen innocent dead, all verified
by humanitarian organizations monitoring the situation. We don't have a
definitive final tabulation because the US bombed radio and TV stations
and worked to keep news of the dead from leaking.

The New York Times reports concerning the newest proposed war:
"General [Richard] Myers gave a stark warning that the American attack
would result in Iraqi civilian casualties despite the military's best efforts to
prevent them." Americans don't like to think about this, but it is a reality
nonetheless. As for best efforts, one would have to turn a blind eye to the
history of US warfare to believe it.

With regard to Iraq in particular, let us remember that the US has waged
unrelenting war on that country for twelve years, with bombings and
sanctions that the UN says have killed millions. The entire fiasco began
with the Iraq invasion of its former province, Kuwait, which the US
ambassador was warned about in advance and responded that the US took
no position on the border-oil dispute then brewing.

But let's return to the economic costs associated with war. It does not
stimulate productivity. It destroys capital, in the same sense that all
government spending destroys capital. It removes resources from where
they are productive – within the market economy – and places them in the
hands of bureaucrats, who assign these resources to uses that have
nothing to do with consumer or producer demand. All decisions made by
government bureaucrats are economically arbitrary because the decision
makers have no access to market signaling.

What's interesting this time around is how the markets seem to have
caught on. The prospect of war is inhibiting recovery. The stock market is
now at 1998 levels, with five years of increased valuations wiped out. The
recession itself, the longest in postwar history, may have been the
inevitable response to the economic bubble that preceded it, but the
drive to war is prolonging it. It could get worse and likely will. Consumer
confidence is falling, as is consumer spending. Unemployment is rising. The
dollar is falling. Commodity prices are rising. All signs point to a man-made
economic calamity.

The deficit is completely out of control. It will soar past $400 billion in
short order. The idea of tax cuts is fine, but let's not pretend as if the bill
for government spending doesn't need to be paid by someone at some
point. It will be paid either through inflation or higher taxes later. In the
meantime, deficits crowd out private production because they need to be
financed through bond holdings. War will only make the problem worse.
>From time immemorial, war has gone along with fiscal irresponsibility.

War also goes hand in hand with government control of the economy. Bush
has increased spending upwards of 30 percent since he took the oath of
office. He has imposed punishing tariffs on steel and hardwood. He has
created the largest new civilian bureaucracy erected since World War II.
He has unleashed the federal police power against the American people in
violation of the constitution. All of this amounts to a war on freedom, of
which commercial freedom is an essential part. This is why no true partisan
of free enterprise can support war.

But what about September 11? Doesn't that event justify just about
anything? Let us not forget that this was a multiple hijacking, of which
there have been hundreds over the decades since commercial flight
became popular. The difference this time was that the hijackers gave up
their lives rather than surrender. It was a low-budget operation, and
needed no international conspiracy to bring it about. It was easily
prevented by permitting pilots to protect their planes and passengers by
force of arms, but federal bureaucrats had a policy against this.

In any case, there is no evidence that Iraq had anything to do with 9-11.
The Iraqi regime is liberal by Muslim standards and for that reason hated by
Islamic fundamentalists. Unlike Saudi Arabia, it tolerates religious diversity,
permits gun ownership, and allows drinking. It has a secular culture,
complete with rock stars and symphony halls, that few other Muslim states
have. Yes it is a dictatorship, but there are a lot of these in the world.
Many of them are US allies.

The focus of the Bush administration on Iraq has more to do with personal
vendettas and Iraqi oil. In waging war, the Bush administration proposes to
spend twice the annual GDP of the entire Iraqi economy! The US will
spend $2 for every $1 it will destroy – the very definition of economic
perversity. What's more, an attack will only further destabilize the region
and recruit more terrorists intent on harming us.

Meanwhile, the prospect of war has markets completely spooked. Is this a
narrow economic concern? Not in any way. Prosperity is an essential
partner in civilization itself. It is the basis of leisure, charity, and a hopeful
outlook on life. It is the means for conquering poverty at the lowest rung
of society, the basis on which children and the elderly are cared for, the
foundation for the cultivation of arts and learning. Crush an economy and
you crush civilization.

It is natural that liberty and peace go together. Liberty makes it possible
for people from different religious traditions and cultural backgrounds to
find common ground. Commerce is the great mechanism that permits
cooperation amidst radical diversity. It is also the basis for the working out
of the brotherhood of man. Trade is the key to peace. It allows us to think
and act both locally and globally.

What makes no sense is the belief that big government can be cultivated at
home without the same government becoming belligerent abroad. What
also makes no sense is the belief that big-government wars and belligerent
foreign policies can be supported without creating the conditions that
allow for the thriving of big government at home. The libertarian view that
peace and freedom go together may be the outlier in current public
opinion. But it is a consistent view, the only one compatible with a true
concern for human rights, and for social and global well-being.

March 6, 2003

Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him mail] is president of the Ludwig von
Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.

Copyright © 2003 LewRockwell.com

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