Bush’s New Defense Budget
by
Robert Higgs
by Robert Higgs
When
the Bush administration released its budget
for fiscal year 2006 recently, the news media, as usual, had
a tough time in making sense of the governments proposals
for defense spending. To some extent, we cant blame them for
their confusion, because even people who follow this subject closely
have trouble sorting out the governments various ways of stating
the defense budget. Figures that appear at one place in the budget
documents are often difficult or impossible to reconcile with figures
that appear at other places in the documents. Conspiracy theorists
might easily conclude that the government deliberately tries to
make a clear understanding impossible. More charitably, we might
conclude that the government simply does not know how to keep a
clean set of books.
The
budget separates proposed spending into various categories, which
outsiders have trouble keeping straight: outlays are
amounts of money to be spent during the fiscal year in question;
budget authority includes newly appropriated amounts
of money to be spent during the fiscal year in question and perhaps
during several later fiscal years as well. Mandatory spending
comprises dollars that must be spent (barring a change in statutory
requirements), whereas discretionary spending includes
dollars that may be spent (and normally will be).
In
a section of the budget called Protecting America appears
the claim: Under this Administration, the Department of Defense
(DOD) has received the largest increases in funding since the Reagan
Administration. . . . The 2006 request represents a 41-percent increase
over 2001. In the documents historical tables, however,
both Table 3.2 and Table 4.1 show that the military part of the
Department of Defenses proposed outlays for fiscal year 2006
exceed the 2001 figure by nearly 47 percent. Is the Bush administration
being unnecessarily modest about its accomplishment in pumping up
military spending or it is simply unaware of what its own data show?
Perhaps
the 41-percent claim pertains to budget authority rather than to
outlays? Evidently not. When we check the data for budget authority
in Tables 5.1 and 5.2 of the historical documents, we discover,
first of all, that the figures in those two tables disagree by $9.5
billion with regard to the Department of Defenses military
budget authority in fiscal year 2001. Depending on which tables
figure we use for 2001, the increase by 2006 comes to either 32
percent or 36 percent still not very close to the 41 percent
claimed in the text and, of course, much father still from the 47-percent
change in outlays.
In
any event, the amount of money provided to the Department of Defense
falls far short of constituting the total amount appropriated for
military purposes. Indeed, in a study
I reported more than a year ago (based on fiscal year 2002 data,
the most recent ones available in complete form at the time I made
my calculations), I concluded that in order to estimate the amount
of all military-related outlays in the federal budget, a good rule
of thumb is to double the amount of the Pentagons outlays.
The
Pentagons own budget for fiscal year 2006, the widely
reported amount of $419 billion in discretionary budget authority does
not include the costs of nuclear warheads, which the Department
of Energy produces; the defense-related activities of the Department
of State, including foreign military financing; the
past military services being compensated currently by benefits provided
through the Department of Veterans Affairs; the defense-related
activities of the Homeland Security Department, such as the Coast
Guards defense activities; various defense-related activities
of several other federal departments; or the current interest costs
of previous, debt-financed military activities. Applying my rule
of thumb, I estimate that the governments total military-related
outlays in fiscal year 2006 will be in the neighborhood of $840
billion or, approximately a third of the total budget, as opposed
to the 16 percent that one calculates by comparing the Pentagons
$419 billion request to the administrations total request,
$2.57 trillion.
Among
the prominent items left out of the regular Pentagon budget are
the amounts to be expended in prosecuting the seemingly perpetual
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which currently eat up approximately
$56 billion per month. So far, the administration has insisted
on financing these war expenditures for the most part out of emergency
supplemental appropriations. On February 14, President Bush sent
Congress a request for $82
billion in supplemental funding, of which some $75 billion would
go to the Department of Defense. The Pentagon would use all but
$5 billion of the additional money for conducting the wars in Afghanistan
and Iraq. Other funds in the request including $660 million
for construction of the gigantic, heavily fortified new U.S. embassy
in Baghdad, $400 million to reward small countries that participated
in the so-called coalition that attacked and occupied Iraq, $200
million for Jordan, and $150 million for Pakistan may be viewed
as indirect war costs. Later on, the administration expects to seek
another supplemental appropriation for war-fighting costs during
fiscal year 2006.
According
to Rep. Jim Kolbe, many members of Congress believe that this
war has become enough of a routine that [those in charge of preparing
the Pentagons budget requests] should be able to build it
into their annual budgeting and not have to come back to us for
supplemental funding of that size. By keeping this funding
separate from the regular request, however, the Bush administration
obscures the wars impact on the budget and, in the words of
Rep. John Spratt, falsely portrays the bottom line at
least in the eyes of the average citizen, who does not pay close
enough attention to appreciate what the government is doing.
The
Bush administration has made a big show recently of seeking to cut
back or eliminate funding for scores of federal programs, and a
few weeks ago the Pentagon attempted to get in on this sham by leaking
a memorandum that inspired headlines in the New York Times
and the Wall Street Journal that might have caused naïve
investors in defense companies to lose sleep: Pentagon Said
to Offer Cuts in Billions proclaimed the Timess
headline of December 30, and Defense Cuts Would Strike Lockheed,
Northrop: Contractors Stand to Lose Billions of Dollars in Orders
As Pentagon Tightens Belt warned the Journals
headline on January 4. Insiders, however, must have slept soundly
through this make-believe storm, because they had to know that it
was all a political farce.
Many
of the so-called cuts were slated to take place several years in
the future, in what budget planners call the out years.
For fiscal year 2005 military spending, no cuts whatsoever were
proposed. Needless to say, given the political context, not to speak
of uncertainties about the course of events in the Middle East and
elsewhere, all such long-range planning contains a large
element of wishful thinking even when advanced seriously. The greater
problem in this case, however, is that no such seriousness attached
to this litany of cutbacks in the first place.
As
Winslow T. Wheeler of the Center for Defense Information wrote
recently, the proposed defense cutbacks will be, as insiders
always knew they would be, dead-on-arrival, owing to
pork barrel spenders in Congress [and] narrow-minded and disingenuous
civilian and military bureaucrats in the Pentagon. . . . [M]agically,
rationales will be found to restore the funding. Indeed, the
Pentagon plays this sort of trick every year, normally after conspiring
in detail with staffers in Congress and the Office of Management
and Budget, who decide in advance who will pretend to seek what,
and how much each interested party will actually get in the end.
Only the general public takes this mendacious ebb and flow seriously.
If, however, even a few voters give the Bush administration credit
for at least trying to restrain the Pentagons
whopping increases in spending, then this time-honored game of set
em up and knock em down makes political sense. In the
end, however, as Wheeler concludes, The feeble attempt [at
cutbacks] will be killed in cold blood and, in Washington, no one
will mourn. To the contrary, they will tout their heroism and celebrate
their conquests. Only the taxpayer will feel the wound.
In
sum, the administrations budget for fiscal year 2006, along
with the shenanigans that strategically placed representatives of
the military-industrial-congressional complex invariably play, insures
that the gravy train of military spending will continue to speed
along the track. The taxpayers have no right to complain, however.
As the president has made clear, theyve already had their
opportunity to participate in an accountability moment,
and now, so far as George W. Bush and his lieutenants are concerned,
that moment is gone forever.
March
5, 2005
Robert
Higgs [send him mail] is
senior fellow in political economy at the Independent
Institute and editor of The
Independent Review. His most recent book is Against
Leviathan.
This
article is reprinted by permission. © Copyright 2005, The
Independent Institute
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