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Inflation and War Finance
by
Ron Paul
by Ron Paul
DIGG THIS
The
Pentagon recently reported that it now spends roughly $8.4 billion
per month waging the war in Iraq, while the additional cost of our
engagement in Afghanistan brings the monthly total to a staggering
$10 billion. Since 2001, Congress has spent more than $500 billion
on specific appropriations for Iraq. This sum is not reflected in
official budget and deficit figures. Congress has funded the war
by passing a series of so-called supplemental spending
bills, which are passed outside of the normal appropriations process
and thus deemed off-budget.
This is fundamentally
dishonest: if were going to have a war, lets face the
costs both human and economic squarely. Congress has no business
hiding the costs of war through accounting tricks.
As the war
in Iraq surges forward, and the administration ponders military
action against Iran, its important to ask ourselves an overlooked
question: Can we really afford it? If every American taxpayer had
to submit an extra five or ten thousand dollars to the IRS this
April to pay for the war, Im quite certain it would end very
quickly. The problem is that government finances war by borrowing
and printing money, rather than presenting a bill directly in the
form of higher taxes. When the costs are obscured, the question
of whether any war is worth it becomes distorted.
Congress and
the Federal Reserve Bank have a cozy, unspoken arrangement that
makes war easier to finance. Congress has an insatiable appetite
for new spending, but raising taxes is politically unpopular. The
Federal Reserve, however, is happy to accommodate deficit spending
by creating new money through the Treasury Department. In exchange,
Congress leaves the Fed alone to operate free of pesky oversight
and free of political scrutiny. Monetary policy is utterly ignored
in Washington, even though the Federal Reserve System is a creation
of Congress.
The result
of this arrangement is inflation. And inflation finances war.
Economist Lawrence
Parks has explained how the creation of the Federal Reserve Bank
in 1913 made possible our involvement in World War I. Without the
ability to create new money, the federal government never could
have afforded the enormous mobilization of men and material. Prior
to that, American wars were financed through taxes and borrowing,
both of which have limits. But government printing presses, at least
in theory, have no limits. Thats why the money supply has
nearly tripled just since 1990.
For perspective,
consider our ongoing military commitment in Korea. In Korea alone,
U.S. taxpayers have spent $1 trillion in todays dollars over
55 years. What do we have to show for it? North Korea is a belligerent
adversary armed with nuclear weapons, while South Korea is at best
ambivalent about our role as their protector. The stalemate stretches
on with no end in sight, as the grandchildren and great-grandchildren
of the men who fought in Korea give little thought to what was gained
or lost. The Korean conflict should serve as a cautionary tale against
the open-ended military occupation of any region.
The
$500 billion weve officially spent in Iraq is an enormous
sum, but the real total is much higher, hidden within the Defense
Department and foreign aid budgets. As we build permanent military
bases and a $1 billion embassy in Iraq, we need to keep asking whether
its really worth it. Congress should at least fund the war
in an honest way so the American people can judge for themselves.
January
30, 2007
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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