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Obscure Economic Indicator: The Guns-to-Caviar Index
Good news! It's going down.
By Daniel Gross
Posted Thursday, Dec. 14, 2006, at 2:26 PM ET

Reading the news, it's easy to get the sense that the world is at war:
strife in Afghanistan, chaos in Iraq, genocide in Darfur, upheaval in
Lebanon, and a variety of insurgencies and border squabbles around the
globe. Reading the news, it's also easy to get the sense that the
world is in the midst of a golden age of peaceful prosperity. Each
year, tens of millions of Indians and Chinese join the middle class.
Latin America and South America, previously dominated by authoritarian
regimes and civil wars, are now generally democratic and enjoying
steady growth.

So, which is it? Is the world more peaceful or more warlike? Since
Americans are doing the lion's share of the fighting and military
policing, it's difficult for us to answer the question objectively.
Fortunately, there is an unbiased global economic indicator that sheds
some light on the question: the Guns-to-Caviar Index.

The index is the brainchild of Richard Aboulafia, an analyst at the
Teal Group. For the last 17 years, Aboulafia has been charting a
relatively simple relationship: how much money the world spends on
fighter jets (guns) versus how much money the world spends on private
business jets (caviar).

The index measures the ratio between the resources spent by
governments arming themselves and the resources spent by really rich
private individuals making themselves more comfortable. It measures
the relative levels of anxiety among large governments and elation
among the global economic elite. When countries are at war, or when
they're girding for it, they spend money on the great desideratum of
military officials—expensive military jets. When things are going
swimmingly and the rich are confident, they buy the most luxurious of
luxury goods: private jets.

Aboulafia says both components are actually lagging indicators of
peace and prosperity. "Defense budgets rise with threats and
perception of threats, and cash filters down, with planes typically
delivered two years after they are ordered," he said. And business jet
orders tend to rise in tandem with profits, with deliveries typically
coming a year after the profit surge.

The index tells the story of geopolitics and global economics in the
last decade and a half. In 1989 and 1990, when there were still Cold
War-era defense budgets, spending on fighters outpaced spending on
private jets by a huge margin: nearly 10-to-1. During the 1990s, the
ratio plummeted, in large part because the two biggest consumers of
fighter jets—the Soviet Union and the United States—stopped building
so many. Between 1989 and 1995, the amount spent on fighter jets
annually fell by two-thirds while business aircraft grew steadily but
not spectacularly. By 1996, the ratio fell to about 2-to-1.

The dynamic shifted more dramatically in the late 1990s, amid the
dot-com boom and a general sense of global calm, despite flare-ups in
the Balkans. Between 1995 and 2000, spending on fighters stagnated
while spending on private planes tripled. In 1999, when Thomas
Friedman's paean to happy globalism, The Lexus and the Olive Tree, was
published, spending on business jets outstripped spending on fighters
for the first time. The ratio fell to record lows in 2000 and 2001,
when spending on private jets was nearly twice the spending on
fighters.

The events of 9/11 and its aftereffects temporarily reversed the
trend. Spending on fighter jets doubled between 2001 and 2004, while a
recession, scandals, and low business confidence knocked down spending
on business jets sharply in both 2002 and 2003. The ratio popped back
in favor of guns.

The recession in business jets proved to be temporary. The last few
years have seen a global orgy of wealth creation in the developed
world (hedge fund managers, CEOs, overpaid sports stars), in the
semideveloped world (Middle East petro-sheikhs, Mexican tycoons), and
in the developing world (Indian software moguls, Chinese
industrialists). Spending on business jets rose about 47 percent
between 2003 and 2005, and 2006 is shaping up to be a record year. As
a result, the Guns-to-Caviar Index fell in 2005 and is likely to fall
again in 2006.

For much of the last 17 years, spending on fighter jets and business
jets seems to have moved in opposite directions: When one was up, the
other was down. But that may no longer be the case. Just as President
Bush has chosen a strategy of guns and butter, spending on both guns
and caviar has risen in the past few years. And in the current
geopolitical/economic climate, that makes sense. Heightened spending
on fighter jets indicates heightened concerns about security,
generally. And in recent years, that has translated into measures that
make flying commercial more of a hassle—which has pushed more and more
rich people to seek private aviation.

Daniel Gross (www.danielgross.net) writes Slate's "Moneybox" column.
You can e-mail him at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Article URL: http://www.slate.com/id/2155445/

Copyright 2006 Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

--
Jim Devine / "The human being is in the most literal sense a political
animal, not merely a gregarious animal, but an animal which can
individuate itself only in the midst of society." -- Karl Marx.

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