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Military Keynesianism

Military Keynesianism is an economic policy based on the position that government should raise military spending to boost economic growth. It is a fiscal stimulus policy as advocated by John Maynard Keynes. But where Keynes advocated increasing public spending on socially useful items (infrastructure in particular), additional public spending is allocated to the arms industry, the area of defense being that over which the executive exercises greater discretionary power. Typical examples of such policies are Nazi Germany, or the United States during and after World War II, during the presidencies of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman. This type of economy is linked to the interdependence between welfare and warfare states, in which the latter feeds the former, in a potentially unlimited spiral. The term is often used pejoratively to refer to politicians who apparently reject Keynesian economics, but use Keynesian arguments in support of excessive military spending.[1][2][3]

Keynesian economics and application edit

The most direct economic criticism of military Keynesianism maintains that government expenditures on non-military public goods such as health care, education, mass transit, and infrastructure repair create more jobs than equivalent military expenditures.[4]

Noam Chomsky, a critic of military Keynesianism, contends that military Keynesianism offers the state advantages over non-military Keynesianism. Specifically, military Keynesianism can be implemented with less public interest and participation. "Social spending may well arouse public interest and participation, thus enhancing the threat of democracy; the public cares about hospitals, roads, neighborhoods, and so on, but has no opinion about the choice of missiles and high-tech fighter planes." Essentially, when the public is less interested in the details of state spending, it affords the state increased discretion in how it spends money.[5]

Nazi Germany edit

Much of the Third Reich economy was oriented towards militarization, especially to prepare for a possible war with the Slavic nations, rather than in the production of consumer goods or towards commercial expansion. Nevertheless, the concentration of capital in the arms industry had favored a rapid expansion of German industrial capacity and helped to reduce unemployment rates.

United States edit

In the United States this theory was applied during the Second World War, during the presidencies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Harry Truman, the latter with the document NSC-68. The influence of Military Keynesianism on US economic policy choices lasted until the Vietnam War. Keynesians maintain that government spending should first be used for useful purposes such as infrastructure investment, but that even non-useful spending may be helpful during recessions. John Maynard Keynes advocated that government spending could be used "in the interests of peace and prosperity" instead of "war and destruction".[6] An example of such policies are the Public Works Administration in the 1930s in the United States.

Keynes' 1933 letter to Roosevelt edit

In 1933, John Maynard Keynes wrote an open letter to President Franklin Roosevelt urging the new president to borrow money to be spent on public works programs.[6]

Thus as the prime mover in the first stage of the technique of recovery I lay overwhelming emphasis on the increase of national purchasing power resulting from governmental expenditure which is financed by Loans and not by taxing present incomes. Nothing else counts in comparison with this. In a boom inflation can be caused by allowing unlimited credit to support the excited enthusiasm of business speculators. But in a slump governmental Loan expenditure is the only sure means of securing quickly a rising output at rising prices. That is why a war has always caused intense industrial activity. In the past orthodox finance has regarded a war as the only legitimate excuse for creating employment by governmental expenditure. You, Mr President, having cast off such fetters, are free to engage in the interests of peace and prosperity the technique which hitherto has only been allowed to serve the purposes of war and destruction.

Barney Frank edit

While the idea dates back to Keynes, a similar term is often attributed to Barney Frank, and seems to have been first used around funding the F-22 fighter:[3][7]

These arguments will come from the very people who denied that the economic recovery plan created any jobs. We have a very odd economic philosophy in Washington: It’s called weaponized Keynesianism. It is the view that the government does not create jobs when it funds the building of bridges or important research or retrains workers, but when it builds airplanes that are never going to be used in combat, that is of course economic salvation.

Forms edit

The following forms of military Keynesianism may be differentiated:

  • First, there is the differentiation between the use of military spending as 'pump primer', and efforts to achieve long term multiplier effects by the given spending. A government may opt to approve the purchases of fighter planes, warships or other military commodities so as to weather a recession. Alternatively, it may opt to approve the purchase of fighter planes, warships or other military commodities throughout all the years of a given business cycle. Since the construction of large armament systems requires extensive planning and research, capitalist states generally prefer to rely on arms' purchases or other military allocations for longer-term macro-economic policymaking and regulation.[citation needed]
  • A second differentiation that needs to be made is between primary and secondary forms of military Keynesianism. In both cases, the state uses the multiplier mechanism in order to stimulate aggregate demand in society. But the primary form of military Keynesianism refers to a situation where the state uses its military allocations as the principal means to drive the business cycle. In case of a secondary form of military Keynesianism, the given allocations contribute towards generating additional demand, but not to the extent that the economy is fully, or primarily, driven by the military allocations.[citation needed]
  • The third differentiation starts from the observation that modern capitalist economies do not function as closed systems but rely on foreign trade and exports as outlets for the sale of a part of their surplus. This general observation applies to the surplus generated in the military sector as well. As the vast amount of data regarding state promotion of arms' exports do confirm, capitalist states actively try to ensure that their armament corporations gain access to import orders from foreign states, and they do so amongst others in order to generate multiplier effects. Hence, there is a need to also differentiate between the two forms of domestic and 'externalized' military Keynesianism.[1]

Permanent war economy edit

The concept of permanent war economy originated in 1945 with an article by Trotskyist[8] Ed Sard (alias Frank Demby, Walter S. Oakes and T.N. Vance), a theoretician who predicted a post-war arms race. He argued at the time that the United States would retain the character of a war economy; even in peacetime, US military expenditure would remain large, reducing the percentage of unemployed compared to the 1930s. He extended this analysis in 1950 and 1951.[9] In 1974, this idea was expanded on by Seymour Melman in the book “The Permanent War Economy: American Capitalism in Decline” where Melman describes the downside of having a permanent war economy as “sustained nonproductive use of capital and labor.[10]” Melman goes on to observe that because this issue “is not unique to the United States[11]” that “It is shared by all states that try to sustain permanent war economies[12].” Melman argues that most of the military production is unnecessary and drains the talents of highly skilled workers due to politicians attempting to create a powerful influx of jobs in their districts, and because of this, most military production is in place to create jobs instead of adding to public safety. Melman suggests that the large sum of money allocated towards unnecessary military spending would be put to better uses by maintaining or improving domestic infrastructure to have an active positive benefit to society.

Empirical estimates edit

Many economists have attempted to estimate the multiplier effect of military expenditures with mixed results. A meta-analysis of 42 primary studies with 243 estimates concluded that military expenditures tended to increase the economy in developed countries with military exports but decrease the economy in less developed countries with generally higher level of political corruption.[13]

Externalities edit

Externalities are rarely if ever considered in estimating a multiplier effect. This can be a serious issue for military expenditures. For example, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) relies mostly on captured weapons. For example, in Mosul between 4 and 10 June 2014 a group of between 500 and 600 ISIL troops "were able to seize six divisions' worth of strategic weaponry, all of it US-supplied" from a force with a paper strength of 120,000 men.[14][15][16] In considering the multiplier effect of military expenditures, the people killed and property destroyed are not considered. The only things that are considered are the increased weapon sales to replace those stolen and the costs associated with combatting ISIL. Those are considered as increasing the Gross Domestic Product of the United States, and that is assumed to be good.[citation needed]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b Custers, Peter (2010). "Military Keynesianism today: an innovative discourse". Race & Class. 51 (4). Institute of Race Relations: 79–94. doi:10.1177/0306396810363049. S2CID 154824097.
  2. ^ Veronique de Rugy (December 2012). "Military Keynesians". Reason Magazine. Reason Foundation. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  3. ^ a b Krugman, Paul (2009-06-24). "Weaponized Keynesianism". New York Times. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  4. ^ Feffer, John (February 9, 2009). "The Risk of Military Keynesianism" (PDF). Institute for Policy Studies (originally in Foreign Policy In Focus).
  5. ^ Noam Chomsky (February 1993). "The Pentagon System". Z Magazine. Reason.
  6. ^ a b Keynes, John Maynard (1933). "An Open Letter to President Roosevelt". Retrieved 2011-08-01.
  7. ^ Frick, Ali (2009-06-23). "Barney Frank: GOP Thinks $2 Billion F-22 Project Is Funded By Monopoly Money". Think Progress.
  8. ^ van der Linden, Marcel (2 January 2018). "Edward L. Sard (1913–99), Theorist of the Permanent War Economy". Critique. 46 (1): 117–130. doi:10.1080/03017605.2017.1412629. ISSN 0301-7605.
  9. ^ See Peter Drucker, Max Schachtman and his Left. A Socialist Odyssey through the 'American Century', Humanities Press 1994, p. xv, 218; Paul Hampton, "Trotskyism after Trotsky? C'est moi!", in Workers Liberty, vol 55, April 1999, p. 38
  10. ^ Melman, Seymour (1974). The permanent war economy: American capitalism in decline. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-21811-9.
  11. ^ Melman, Seymour (1974). The permanent war economy: American capitalism in decline. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-21811-9.
  12. ^ Melman, Seymour (1974). The permanent war economy: American capitalism in decline. New York: Simon and Schuster. ISBN 978-0-671-21811-9.
  13. ^ Awaworyi, Sefa; Yew, Siew Ling (2014), (PDF), Discussion paper 25/14, vol. 14, no. 15, Department of Economics, Monash U., archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-29, retrieved 2017-03-15
  14. ^ , Enemy of Enemies: The Rise of ISIL, 2015, archived from the original on 2015-11-27, retrieved 2015-11-27
  15. ^ Astore, William J. (2014-10-14), Tomgram: William Astore, America's Hollow Foreign Legions – Investing in Junk Armies, TomDispatch.com, retrieved 2014-10-16
  16. ^ , Enemy of Enemies: The Rise of ISIL, Al Jazeera, 2015, archived from the original on 2015-11-27, retrieved 2015-11-27

References edit

  • Walter S. Oakes, 1944, "Towards a Permanent Arms Economy?", Politics, February.
  • T. N. Vance, 1950, "After Korea What? An Economic Interpretation of U.S. Perspectives", New International, November–December.
  • T. N. Vance, 1951, "The Permanent Arms Economy", New International. [series of articles]
  • Charles Edward Wilson, "Army Ordnance (Vol. XXVI, No. 143, March–April 1944)".
  • Tony Cliff, Perspectives for the permanent war economy. Socialist Review March 1957. Reprint Tony Cliff, Marxist Theory after Trotsky. Selected Writings. Volume 3. Bookmarks London 2003. ISBN 1-898876-93-2
  • Chris Harman, Explaining the Crisis – A Marxist Re-Appraisal. Bookmarks London 1999. ISBN 0-906224-11-X
  • Chris Harman, Analysing Imperialism International Socialism 99. Summer 2003.
  • Michael Kidron, Western Capitalism Since the War. Penguin Books Harmondsworth 1970.
  • Alfred Sohn-Rethel, Industrie und Nationalsozialismus. Aufzeichnungen aus dem “Mitteleuropäischen Wirtschaftstag”. Wagenbach-Verlag Berlin 1992. ISBN 3-8031-2204-X
  • Alfred Sohn-Rethel, Economy and class structure of German fascism London, CSE Books 1978.
  • Ernest Mandel, Late Capitalism. London: Verso, 1975.

External links edit

  • Cheap Wars by Jonathan Nitzan, Ph.D. Associate Professor of Political Economy, and Shimshon Bichler, Lecturer of Political Economy
  • Defense Doesn't Need Stimulus by Christopher Preble, Ph.D. History
  • Doesn't all the war spending stimulate the economy? And shouldn't the Bush tax cuts do the same? So why are we falling into recession? Dollars & Sense magazine
  • Military Keynesianism to the Rescue? by Robert Higgs, Ph.D. Professor Emeritus of Economics
  • Rich Nation, Strong Army: National Security and the Technological Transformation of Japan by Richard J. Samuels, Ph.D. Professor of Political Science
  • The economic disaster that is military Keynesianism: Why the US has really gone broke by Dr.Chalmers Johnson in the English edition of Le Monde Diplomatique
  • High Tech, A Subsidiary Of Pentagon Inc. by Robert B. Reich
  • Macroeconomic Consequences of Peace: American Radical Economists and the Problem of Military Keynesianism, 1938–1975

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Military Keynesianism is an economic policy based on the position that government should raise military spending to boost economic growth It is a fiscal stimulus policy as advocated by John Maynard Keynes But where Keynes advocated increasing public spending on socially useful items infrastructure in particular additional public spending is allocated to the arms industry the area of defense being that over which the executive exercises greater discretionary power Typical examples of such policies are Nazi Germany or the United States during and after World War II during the presidencies of Franklin D Roosevelt and Harry S Truman This type of economy is linked to the interdependence between welfare and warfare states in which the latter feeds the former in a potentially unlimited spiral The term is often used pejoratively to refer to politicians who apparently reject Keynesian economics but use Keynesian arguments in support of excessive military spending 1 2 3 Contents 1 Keynesian economics and application 1 1 Nazi Germany 1 2 United States 1 3 Keynes 1933 letter to Roosevelt 1 4 Barney Frank 2 Forms 3 Permanent war economy 4 Empirical estimates 5 Externalities 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksKeynesian economics and application editThe most direct economic criticism of military Keynesianism maintains that government expenditures on non military public goods such as health care education mass transit and infrastructure repair create more jobs than equivalent military expenditures 4 Noam Chomsky a critic of military Keynesianism contends that military Keynesianism offers the state advantages over non military Keynesianism Specifically military Keynesianism can be implemented with less public interest and participation Social spending may well arouse public interest and participation thus enhancing the threat of democracy the public cares about hospitals roads neighborhoods and so on but has no opinion about the choice of missiles and high tech fighter planes Essentially when the public is less interested in the details of state spending it affords the state increased discretion in how it spends money 5 Nazi Germany edit Much of the Third Reich economy was oriented towards militarization especially to prepare for a possible war with the Slavic nations rather than in the production of consumer goods or towards commercial expansion Nevertheless the concentration of capital in the arms industry had favored a rapid expansion of German industrial capacity and helped to reduce unemployment rates United States edit In the United States this theory was applied during the Second World War during the presidencies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt and Harry Truman the latter with the document NSC 68 The influence of Military Keynesianism on US economic policy choices lasted until the Vietnam War Keynesians maintain that government spending should first be used for useful purposes such as infrastructure investment but that even non useful spending may be helpful during recessions John Maynard Keynes advocated that government spending could be used in the interests of peace and prosperity instead of war and destruction 6 An example of such policies are the Public Works Administration in the 1930s in the United States Keynes 1933 letter to Roosevelt edit In 1933 John Maynard Keynes wrote an open letter to President Franklin Roosevelt urging the new president to borrow money to be spent on public works programs 6 Thus as the prime mover in the first stage of the technique of recovery I lay overwhelming emphasis on the increase of national purchasing power resulting from governmental expenditure which is financed by Loans and not by taxing present incomes Nothing else counts in comparison with this In a boom inflation can be caused by allowing unlimited credit to support the excited enthusiasm of business speculators But in a slump governmental Loan expenditure is the only sure means of securing quickly a rising output at rising prices That is why a war has always caused intense industrial activity In the past orthodox finance has regarded a war as the only legitimate excuse for creating employment by governmental expenditure You Mr President having cast off such fetters are free to engage in the interests of peace and prosperity the technique which hitherto has only been allowed to serve the purposes of war and destruction Barney Frank edit While the idea dates back to Keynes a similar term is often attributed to Barney Frank and seems to have been first used around funding the F 22 fighter 3 7 These arguments will come from the very people who denied that the economic recovery plan created any jobs We have a very odd economic philosophy in Washington It s called weaponized Keynesianism It is the view that the government does not create jobs when it funds the building of bridges or important research or retrains workers but when it builds airplanes that are never going to be used in combat that is of course economic salvation Forms editThe following forms of military Keynesianism may be differentiated First there is the differentiation between the use of military spending as pump primer and efforts to achieve long term multiplier effects by the given spending A government may opt to approve the purchases of fighter planes warships or other military commodities so as to weather a recession Alternatively it may opt to approve the purchase of fighter planes warships or other military commodities throughout all the years of a given business cycle Since the construction of large armament systems requires extensive planning and research capitalist states generally prefer to rely on arms purchases or other military allocations for longer term macro economic policymaking and regulation citation needed A second differentiation that needs to be made is between primary and secondary forms of military Keynesianism In both cases the state uses the multiplier mechanism in order to stimulate aggregate demand in society But the primary form of military Keynesianism refers to a situation where the state uses its military allocations as the principal means to drive the business cycle In case of a secondary form of military Keynesianism the given allocations contribute towards generating additional demand but not to the extent that the economy is fully or primarily driven by the military allocations citation needed The third differentiation starts from the observation that modern capitalist economies do not function as closed systems but rely on foreign trade and exports as outlets for the sale of a part of their surplus This general observation applies to the surplus generated in the military sector as well As the vast amount of data regarding state promotion of arms exports do confirm capitalist states actively try to ensure that their armament corporations gain access to import orders from foreign states and they do so amongst others in order to generate multiplier effects Hence there is a need to also differentiate between the two forms of domestic and externalized military Keynesianism 1 Permanent war economy editThe concept of permanent war economy originated in 1945 with an article by Trotskyist 8 Ed Sard alias Frank Demby Walter S Oakes and T N Vance a theoretician who predicted a post war arms race He argued at the time that the United States would retain the character of a war economy even in peacetime US military expenditure would remain large reducing the percentage of unemployed compared to the 1930s He extended this analysis in 1950 and 1951 9 In 1974 this idea was expanded on by Seymour Melman in the book The Permanent War Economy American Capitalism in Decline where Melman describes the downside of having a permanent war economy as sustained nonproductive use of capital and labor 10 Melman goes on to observe that because this issue is not unique to the United States 11 that It is shared by all states that try to sustain permanent war economies 12 Melman argues that most of the military production is unnecessary and drains the talents of highly skilled workers due to politicians attempting to create a powerful influx of jobs in their districts and because of this most military production is in place to create jobs instead of adding to public safety Melman suggests that the large sum of money allocated towards unnecessary military spending would be put to better uses by maintaining or improving domestic infrastructure to have an active positive benefit to society Empirical estimates editMany economists have attempted to estimate the multiplier effect of military expenditures with mixed results A meta analysis of 42 primary studies with 243 estimates concluded that military expenditures tended to increase the economy in developed countries with military exports but decrease the economy in less developed countries with generally higher level of political corruption 13 Externalities editExternalities are rarely if ever considered in estimating a multiplier effect This can be a serious issue for military expenditures For example the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant ISIL relies mostly on captured weapons For example in Mosul between 4 and 10 June 2014 a group of between 500 and 600 ISIL troops were able to seize six divisions worth of strategic weaponry all of it US supplied from a force with a paper strength of 120 000 men 14 15 16 In considering the multiplier effect of military expenditures the people killed and property destroyed are not considered The only things that are considered are the increased weapon sales to replace those stolen and the costs associated with combatting ISIL Those are considered as increasing the Gross Domestic Product of the United States and that is assumed to be good citation needed See also edit nbsp politics portal nbsp business portal Arms industry Bernard Baruch Cold War Countercyclical Employer of last resort Iron triangle US politics Keynesian economics Lemon socialism List of countries by military expenditures Military budget of the United States Military industrial complex Parable of the broken window Perpetual war Ultra imperialism War economyNotes edit a b Custers Peter 2010 Military Keynesianism today an innovative discourse Race amp Class 51 4 Institute of Race Relations 79 94 doi 10 1177 0306396810363049 S2CID 154824097 Veronique de Rugy December 2012 Military Keynesians Reason Magazine Reason Foundation Retrieved 2 February 2013 a b Krugman Paul 2009 06 24 Weaponized Keynesianism New York Times Retrieved 26 January 2015 Feffer John February 9 2009 The Risk of Military Keynesianism PDF Institute for Policy Studies originally in Foreign Policy In Focus Noam Chomsky February 1993 The Pentagon System Z Magazine Reason a b Keynes John Maynard 1933 An Open Letter to President Roosevelt Retrieved 2011 08 01 Frick Ali 2009 06 23 Barney Frank GOP Thinks 2 Billion F 22 Project Is Funded By Monopoly Money Think Progress van der Linden Marcel 2 January 2018 Edward L Sard 1913 99 Theorist of the Permanent War Economy Critique 46 1 117 130 doi 10 1080 03017605 2017 1412629 ISSN 0301 7605 See Peter Drucker Max Schachtman and his Left A Socialist Odyssey through the American Century Humanities Press 1994 p xv 218 Paul Hampton Trotskyism after Trotsky C est moi in Workers Liberty vol 55 April 1999 p 38 Melman Seymour 1974 The permanent war economy American capitalism in decline New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 21811 9 Melman Seymour 1974 The permanent war economy American capitalism in decline New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 21811 9 Melman Seymour 1974 The permanent war economy American capitalism in decline New York Simon and Schuster ISBN 978 0 671 21811 9 Awaworyi Sefa Yew Siew Ling 2014 The Effect of Military Expenditure on Growth An Empirical Synthesis PDF Discussion paper 25 14 vol 14 no 15 Department of Economics Monash U archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 29 retrieved 2017 03 15 5 2009 2015 Syria uprising and ISIL in Syria Enemy of Enemies The Rise of ISIL 2015 archived from the original on 2015 11 27 retrieved 2015 11 27 Astore William J 2014 10 14 Tomgram William Astore America s Hollow Foreign Legions Investing in Junk Armies TomDispatch com retrieved 2014 10 16 2 2004 2006 Abu Musab Al Zarqawi Emerges Enemy of Enemies The Rise of ISIL Al Jazeera 2015 archived from the original on 2015 11 27 retrieved 2015 11 27References editWalter S Oakes 1944 Towards a Permanent Arms Economy Politics February T N Vance 1950 After Korea What An Economic Interpretation of U S Perspectives New International November December T N Vance 1951 The Permanent Arms Economy New International series of articles Charles Edward Wilson Army Ordnance Vol XXVI No 143 March April 1944 Tony Cliff Perspectives for the permanent war economy Socialist Review March 1957 Reprint Tony Cliff Marxist Theory after Trotsky Selected Writings Volume 3 Bookmarks London 2003 ISBN 1 898876 93 2 Chris Harman Explaining the Crisis A Marxist Re Appraisal Bookmarks London 1999 ISBN 0 906224 11 X Chris Harman Analysing Imperialism International Socialism 99 Summer 2003 Michael Kidron Western Capitalism Since the War Penguin Books Harmondsworth 1970 Alfred Sohn Rethel Industrie und Nationalsozialismus Aufzeichnungen aus dem Mitteleuropaischen Wirtschaftstag Wagenbach Verlag Berlin 1992 ISBN 3 8031 2204 X Alfred Sohn Rethel Economy and class structure of German fascism London CSE Books 1978 Ernest Mandel Late Capitalism London Verso 1975 External links editCheap Wars by Jonathan Nitzan Ph D Associate Professor of Political Economy and Shimshon Bichler Lecturer of Political Economy Defense Doesn t Need Stimulus by Christopher Preble Ph D History Doesn t all the war spending stimulate the economy And shouldn t the Bush tax cuts do the same So why are we falling into recession Dollars amp Sense magazine Military Keynesianism to the Rescue by Robert Higgs Ph D Professor Emeritus of Economics Rich Nation Strong Army National Security and the Technological Transformation of Japan by Richard J Samuels Ph D Professor of Political Science The economic disaster that is military Keynesianism Why the US has really gone broke by Dr Chalmers Johnson in the English edition of Le Monde Diplomatique High Tech A Subsidiary Of Pentagon Inc by Robert B Reich Macroeconomic Consequences of Peace American Radical Economists and the Problem of Military Keynesianism 1938 1975 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Military Keynesianism amp oldid 1220994927, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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