Why Not Another World War?
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
New Ideological Divide
There is overwhelming agreement among economists that the Second
World War was responsible for decisively ending the Great Depression.
When asked why the wars in Iran and Afghanistan are failing to make
the same impact today, they often claim that the current conflicts
are simply too small to be economically significant.
There is, of course, much irony here. No one argues that World
War II, with its genocide, tens of millions of combatant casualties,
and wholesale destruction of cities and regions, was good for humanity.
But the improved American economy of the late 1940s seems to illustrate
the benefits of large-scale government stimulus. This conundrum
may be causing some to wonder how we could capture the good without
the bad.
If one believes that government spending can create economic growth,
then the answer should be simple: let's have a huge pretend war
that rivals the Second World War in size. However, this time, let's
not kill anyone.
Most economists believe that massive federal government spending
on tanks, uniforms, bullets, and battleships used in World War II,
as well the jobs created to actually wage the War, finally put to
an end the paralyzing "deflationary trap" that had existed
since the Crash of 1929. Many further argue that war spending succeeded
where the much smaller New Deal programs of the 1930s had fallen
short.
The numbers were indeed staggering. From 1940 to 1944, federal
spending shot up more than six times from just $9.5 billion to $72
billion. This increase led to a corresponding $75 billion expansion
of US nominal GDP, from $101 billion in 1940 to $175 billion by
1944. In other words, the war effort caused US GDP to increase close
to 75% in just four years!
The War also wiped out the country's chronic unemployment problems.
In 1940, eleven years after the Crash, unemployment was still at
a stubbornly high 8.1%. By 1944, the figure had dropped to less
than 1%. The fresh influx of government spending and deployment
of working-age men overseas drew women into the workforce in unprecedented
numbers, thereby greatly expanding economic output. In addition,
government spending on wartime technology produced a great many
breakthroughs that impacted consumer goods production for decades.
So, why not have the United States declare a fake war on Russia
(a grudge match that is, after all, long overdue)? Both countries
could immediately order full employment and revitalize their respective
manufacturing sectors. Instead of live munitions, we could build
all varieties of paint guns, water balloons, and stink bombs.
Once new armies have been drafted and properly outfitted with harmless
weaponry, our two countries could stage exciting war games. Perhaps
the US could mount an amphibious invasion of Kamchatka (just like
in Risk!). As far as the destruction goes, let's just bring in Pixar
and James Cameron. With limitless funds from Washington, these Hollywood
magicians could surely produce simulated mayhem more spectacular
than Pearl Harbor or D-Day. The spectacle could be televised
with advertising revenue going straight to the government.
The competition could be extended so that the winner of the pseudo-conflict
could challenge another country to an all-out fake war. I'm sure
France or Italy wouldn't mind putting a few notches in the 'win'
column. The stimulus could be never-ending.
If the US can't find any willing international partners, we could
always re-create the Civil War. Missed the Monitor vs. the Merrimack
the first time? No worries, we'll do it again!
But to repeat the impact of World War II today would require a
truly massive effort. Replicating the six-fold increase in the federal
budget that was seen in the early 1940s would result in a nearly
$20 trillion budget today. That equates to $67,000 for every man,
woman, and child in the country. Surely, the tremendous GDP growth
created by such spending would make short work of the so-called
Great Recession.
The big question is how to pay for it. To a degree that will surprise
many, the US funded its World War II effort largely by raising taxes
and tapping into Americans' personal savings. Both of those avenues
are nowhere near as promising today as they were in 1941.
Current tax burdens are now much higher than they were before
the War, so raising taxes today would be much more difficult. The
"Victory Tax" of 1942 sharply raised income tax rates
and allowed, for the first time in our nation's history, taxes to
be withheld directly from paychecks. The hikes were originally intended
to be temporary but have, of course, far outlasted their purpose.
It would be unlikely that Americans would accept higher taxes today
to fund a real war, let alone a pretend one.
That leaves savings, which was the War's primary source of funding.
During the War, Americans purchased approximately $186 billion worth
of war bonds, accounting for nearly three quarters of total federal
spending from 19411945. Today, we don't have the savings to
pay for our current spending, let alone any significant expansions.
Even if we could convince the Chinese to loan us a large chunk of
the $20 trillion (on top of the $1 trillion we already owe them),
how could we ever pay them back?
If all of this seems absurd, that's because it is. War is a great
way to destroy things, but it's a terrible way to grow an economy.
What is often overlooked is that war creates hardship, and not
just for those who endure the violence. Yes, US production increased
during the Second World War, but very little of that was of use
to anyone but soldiers. Consumers can't use a bomber to take a family
vacation.
The goal of an economy is to raise living standards. During the
War, as productive output was diverted to the front, consumer goods
were rationed back home and living standards fell. While it's easy
to see the numerical results of wartime spending, it is much harder
to see the civilian cutbacks that enabled it.
The truth is that we cannot spend our way out of our current crisis,
no matter how great a spectacle we create. Even if we spent on infrastructure
rather than war, we would still have no means to fund it, and there
would still be no guarantee that the economy would grow as a result.
What we need is more savings, more free enterprise, more production,
and a return of American competitiveness in the global economy.
Yes, we need Rosie the Riveter but this time she has to work in
the private sector making things that don't explode. To do this,
we need less government spending, not more.
July
21, 2010
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
Copyright
© 2010 Euro Pacific Capital
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