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The Myth of War Prosperity
by
Rep. Ron Paul,
MD
Ron
Paul in the US House of Representatives, March 4, 2003
Mr.
Speaker, I want to talk tonight about an economic myth. There is
a longstanding myth that war benefits the economy.
The
argument goes that when a country is at war, jobs are created and
the economy grows. This is a myth. Many argue that World War
II ended the Great Depression, which is another myth. Unemployment
went down because many men were drafted, but national economic output
went down during the war.
Economic
growth and a true end to the Depression did not occur until after
World War II. So it is wrong to think there is an economic benefit
arising from war.
There
are many economic shortcomings during a war. During wartime it is
much more common to experience inflation because the money presses
are running to fund military expenses. Also, during wartime
there is a bigger challenge to the currency of the warring nation,
and already we see that the dollar has dropped 20 percent in the
past year. Although there are many other reasons for a weak
dollar, the war certainly is contributing to the weakness in the
dollar.
Also,
during wartime the country can expect that taxes will go up. I know
we are talking about cutting taxes, and I am all for cutting taxes;
but in real terms taxes will go up during wartime. And it is inevitable
that deficits increase. And right now our deficits are exploding.
Our national debt is going up nearly $500 billion per year.
The
other shortcoming economically of wartime is that funds, once they
are borrowed, inflated, or taxed, once the government spends these,
so much of this expenditure is overseas, and it takes away from
domestic spending. So this is a strong negative for the domestic
economy. Another thing that arises during wartime so often is the
sentiment for protectionism and a weak economy in wartime will
really build an incentive for protectionist measures, and we are
starting to see that, which I think is a danger.
During
wartime, trade is much more difficult; and so if a war comes, we
can expect that even our trade balances might get much worse. There
are a lot of subjective problems during wartime too. The first thing
that goes is confidence. Right now there is less confidence
in the stock market and literally hundreds of billions of dollars
lost in the stock market in the last year or two, again, due to
other reasons; but the possibility of war contributes to this negative
sentiment toward the stock market.
It
is hard to judge the future. Nobody can know the future because
of the unintended consequences of war. We do not know how long the
war will last. How much it will spread? So there are a lot of uncertainties
about this. There is fear. Fear comes from the potential for war
and a lot of confusion. And unfortunately, when wars are not fought
for national security reasons, the popularity of the war is questioned and this may alienate our allies. And I believe we are seeing some
of that already.
There
is no doubt that during wartime government expands in size and scope.
And this of course is a great danger. And after war, the government
rarely shrinks to its original size. It grows. It may shrink a little,
but inevitably the size of the government grows because of war.
This is a danger because when government gets bigger, the individual
has to get smaller; therefore, it diminishes personal individual
liberty. So
these are the costs that we cannot ignore. We have the cost
of potential loss of life, but there are also tremendous economic
costs that even the best economists cannot calculate closely.
War
should always be fought as the very, very last resort. It should
never be done casually, but only when absolutely necessary. And
when it is, I believe it should be fought to be won. It should
be declared. It should not be fought under U.N. resolutions
or for U.N. resolutions, but for the sovereignty and the safety
and the security of this country. It is explicit in our Constitution
that necessary wars be declared by the Congress. And that is something
that concerns me a great deal because we have not declared war outright
since 1945, and if you look carefully, we have not won very many
since then.
We
are lingering in Korea. What a mess! We have been there for 58 years,
have spent hundreds of billions of dollars, and we still have achieved
nothing because we went there under U.N. resolutions and
we did not fight to victory. The same was true with the first Persian
Gulf War. We went into Iraq without a declaration of war.
We went there under the U.N., we are still there, and nobody knows
how long we will be there. So there are many costs, some hidden
and some overt. But the greatest threat, the greatest cost of war
is the threat to individual liberty. So I caution my colleagues
that we should move much more cautiously and hope and pray for peace.
Dr.
Ron Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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